One-Time License

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.

A one-time license is a pay-once permission to use a specific track, asset, or piece of content under stated terms, instead of paying a recurring subscription fee or ongoing royalties for that same licensed use. In practice, it usually means the buyer gets a nonexclusive license for one asset, and one approved use, project, channel, or end product – not ownership of the copyright itself.

Quick facts:
Also called: single-use license, per-track license, one-off license
Applies to: music libraries, stock media, creator content, client projects
Used for: licensing one asset for one defined use without a subscription
Not the same as: copyright ownership, blanket access, or unlimited multi-project reuse.

Example:
A freelance editor licenses one music track for a client’s product video and pays once at checkout. That license may cover that one video and its stated distribution terms, but a second client campaign, a broadcast placement, or a new end product may require a new license or a higher tier.

Gotchas:

  • One-time does not always mean unlimited reuse. Some licenses are tied to one end product, one project, or one specific use.
  • Pay once does not mean own it. Copyright usually stays with the rights holder, while you receive permission to use the asset under license terms.
  • Platform, audience, and media type can change the license you need. Web, ads, broadcast, apps, film, and paid distribution are often treated differently.
  • A one-time license can still lead to claims problems if the asset is used outside scope or if proof of license is missing. Keeping the license certificate and project records matters.

FAQs

Not exactly. A one-time license is a payment model, while royalty-free usually describes a licensing model where you do not pay ongoing per-use royalties after the licensed purchase.

Usually no, unless the license explicitly allows multi-project or repeated use. Many official license systems tie the asset to one specific project or end product and require a new license for a new use.

Not always. Some licenses are ongoing for the life of the permitted project, while others depend on the provider’s exact terms, media type, or upgrade path. You have to check the actual license text, not just the pricing label.

It can be, but only if the license covers monetized use on that platform.

Yes. Save the invoice, license certificate, asset ID, and project notes. If a dispute, claim, or client handoff comes up later, that paperwork is often the first thing you need.


Related terms

License LogUsage ScopeCommercial UsePlatform-Specific LicenseSync License • Regional Availability • Proof Workflow