The music industry didn’t just survive in 2024, it grew, and against all expectations.
While digital downloads declined and ad-supported streaming faltered, total recorded music revenue hit a record-breaking $17.7 billion, up 3% from the previous year.
The driver, as revealed in a new report by the Record Industry Association of America (RIAA), was a mix of streaming power, an unstoppable vinyl resurgence, and changing listener habits that impacted the industry’s revenue streams.
Streaming: A 100-Million-Subscriber Juggernaut
Streaming wasn’t just the biggest piece of the music industry, it was the music industry. 84% of all revenue came from streaming, showing how deeply embedded digital listening has become.
Paid subscriptions crossed the historic 100 million mark for the first time, leading to $11.7 billion in revenue, a 5% increase over 2023. This accounted for nearly two-thirds of the industry’s total earnings.
However, not all streaming categories thrived. Ad-supported streaming, including platforms like YouTube’s free tier and Spotify’s ad-supported service, declined by 2% to $1.8 billion. Consumers were willing to pay for music, but they weren’t as willing to sit through ads.
Vinyl’s so-called “revival” has now lasted longer than its original golden era, marking its 18th consecutive year of growth.
In 2024, vinyl sales surged another 7%, reaching $1.4 billion. The format now makes up nearly three-quarters of all physical music revenues, and for the third year in a row, vinyl albums outsold CDs in sheer units—44 million versus 33 million.
Meanwhile, CDs managed to eke out a 1% revenue increase, bringing in $541 million, but they remain a shadow of their former dominance.
A decade ago, digital downloads accounted for 43% of recorded music revenue. Today? Just 2%. In 2024, revenue from digital downloads collapsed another 18%, dropping to $336 million. Single-track sales fell 19%, while digital album downloads slid nearly 18.6%.
The era of ownership is over. Streaming didn’t just disrupt—it decimated.
Even with digital downloads crumbling and ad-supported streaming taking a hit, the music industry is healthier than ever. Total physical and digital revenues grew by 3.3%, proving that consumers are still willing to pay for music—just not in the ways they used to.
The real story? Listeners are driving the industry’s growth. They’re ditching ad-supported services, moving toward paid subscriptions, and embracing vinyl as a statement of nostalgia and authenticity. If 2024 showed us anything, it’s that the music business isn’t just surviving, but thriving in unexpected ways.
And for the first time in history, 100 million people are willing to pay for the soundtrack of their lives.