You can see how much money you made on the “Music Sales” page of your account (under the "Money & Reports" tab).
You can do the following customized viewing on this page:
- Filter your results by release title, song, sales date range, store
- Click “Download This Report” from the filtered sales screen you are viewing, which will save as a .csv file
- Sort columns
- Get an immediate sum on top of your filtered results which reflects the cumulative earnings based on your filtering
You can also download your official Monthly Sales Reports when you go to the "Money & Reports" tab and click "Monthly Sales Reports." These sales reports include the following columns:
- Sales Period : the period of time when your music was sold in the respective stores
- Posted Date : the date that the report appeared in your account
- Store Name : the digital store that paid you for the reported sales period
- Country of Sale : the territory of the store where the sale occurred
- Artist : the artist name of the release, song or ringtone that was sold
- Release Type : album, song or ringtone (a single is reported as a song sale)
- Release Title : the title of the album, song or ringtone (note: iTunes automatically reports sales for albums with 10 tracks or less as individual song sales. The reason for this is their pricing. If an album has 10 tracks or less, iTunes automatically prices it as $0.99 times however many tracks (so an album with 10 tracks is 10 x $0.99 = $9.90). Therefore, there is no difference in price between buying the whole album or just buying all of the tracks individually. If an album has 11 tracks or more however, iTunes will price it at $9.99 (so it becomes cheaper to purchase the whole album than to purchase all of the tracks individually).
- Song Title : if the sale occurred as a song purchase and not an entire album, the song name that was purchased shows (see note above for Release Title)
- Label : the label listed on the release, song or ringtone
- UPC : the TuneCore generated UPC of the release, song or ringtone (disregard this if you submitted your own UPC)
- Optional UPC : if applicable, the UPC you entered on your own in TuneCore (note, you will see a "UPC" value as well, but you can disregard this since your own UPC was reported in the sale)
- TC Song ID : TuneCore generated Song ID (disregard this if you submitted your own ISRC)
- Optional ISRC : if applicable, the ISRC you submitted on your own in TuneCore (note, you will see a "TC Song ID" value as well, but you can disregard this since your own ISRC was reported in the sale)
- Sales Type : Download or Stream
- # Units Sold : as reported to us by the store, the # of albums, songs or ringtones sold in a reporting day
- Per Unit Price : the price of 1 unit that sold in that stated country's currency
- Net Sales : the amount of money paid out by the store after keeping their percentage of a sale × # of units (Remember, TuneCore keeps nothing of your sales money)
- Net Sales Currency : the currency of the Net Sales amount
- Exchange Rate : the currency conversion rate stated at a specific time for that country into US Dollars (TuneCore pays you in US Dollars only)
- Total Earned : the amount you received in your Tunecore account after the stated exchange rate
- Currency : This will always be USD since we pay out in US Dollars only
Please note: iTunes automatically reports sales for albums with 10 tracks or less as individual track sales. The reason for this is their pricing: if an album has 10 tracks or less, iTunes automatically prices it as $0.99 x no. of tracks (i.e. an album with 10 tracks is 10 x $0.99 = $9.90). Therefore, there is no difference in price between buying the whole album or just buying all of the tracks individually. If an album has 11 tracks or more however, iTunes will price it at $9.99 (so it becomes cheaper to purchase the whole album than to purchase all of the tracks individually).
On the "Balance History" page (in the dropdown under your name), you can view transactions in your account by music sales, purchases, withdrawals and more.
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