Cross-Platform Use
Audiodrome is a royalty-free music platform designed specifically for content creators who need affordable, high-quality background music for videos, podcasts, social media, and commercial projects. Unlike subscription-only services, Audiodrome offers both free tracks and simple one-time licensing with full commercial rights, including DMCA-safe use on YouTube, Instagram, and TikTok. All music is original, professionally produced, and PRO-free, ensuring zero copyright claims. It’s ideal for YouTubers, freelancers, marketers, and anyone looking for budget-friendly audio that’s safe to monetize.
Cross-platform use means using the same licensed asset, such as a music track, sound effect, image, or video element, across more than one platform, channel, or distribution environment. In licensing workflows, it is only allowed when the license scope covers those additional uses, because one platform’s built-in music rights or one project license does not automatically extend everywhere else.
Quick facts:
Also called: multi-platform use, multi-channel use, reuse across platforms
Applies to: YouTube, TikTok, Instagram, Facebook, websites, ads, apps, and client deliverables
Used for: reposting one asset across several channels or reusing the same licensed file in multiple environments
Not the same as: universal clearance, unlimited reuse, or automatic approval for commercial accounts.
Example:
A creator licenses a music track for a YouTube video, then wants to use the same video on Instagram Reels, TikTok, and a client landing page. That may count as cross-platform use, but whether it is allowed depends on the actual license terms and the platform rules, since TikTok, Instagram, and YouTube each apply different music-access and commercial-use restrictions.
Gotchas:
- One license does not always cover every platform. Each download gets an ongoing license for a single, specified use, and its user terms describe the license as one project for a specific end product.
- Platform libraries are often platform-specific. YouTube says Audio Library songs can be used in monetized YouTube videos, while Meta’s Sound Collection is described for Facebook reels and Instagram Stories, not as a blanket license for every outside platform.
- Commercial cross-platform reuse can trigger extra limits. TikTok says music outside its Commercial Music Library is not covered for commercial use in content promoting a brand, product, or service, and Instagram says certain business accounts and certain post types do not have access to its licensed music library for commercial-use reasons.
- Format-specific rules still matter. YouTube Shorts has its own music-eligibility limits, including time limits for songs from the Shorts Audio Library, so a track cleared in one workflow is not automatically cleared the same way in another format.
FAQs
Related terms
Platform-Specific License • Usage Scope • Business License • Client Work • Commercial Use • Creator Music • Commercial Music Library • Meta Music Library

