Music License for Pinterest Creators
Choose music for paid-use Pinterest workflows – promoted Pins, branded content, and agency deliverables

Pinterest music choices get more serious when a Pin becomes part of a paid campaign. A casual Pin, a promoted Pin, a brand post, and a client video can all involve different permission needs.
The key question is simple: do you have permission to use the track in the exact Pinterest project you plan to publish?
When Pinterest creators need a clearer music license
A Pinterest creator needs a clearer music license when the Pin moves beyond casual posting.
That includes a promoted Pin for a product launch, a video Pin for an email list campaign, a sponsored post for a brand partner, or an agency-made asset delivered to a client. These projects use music as part of marketing, not just personal content.
A food creator running a paid Pin for a recipe ebook needs commercial permission. A freelancer making a Pinterest video for a skincare brand needs permission that covers client publishing. A small business turning a seasonal video into repeat ads needs permission that supports campaign reuse.
The trigger is the use case. Paid delivery, brand involvement, client delivery, and repeat campaign use all call for stronger proof than “I found this sound in an app.”
What to check before using music in a promoted Pin
Start with the source of the music.
If the track came from a social platform library, read the music terms before using it in a promoted Pin or brand campaign. Pinterest’s own help guidance says brands need permission before promoting Pins with licensed music, and Pins with music used without permission may be muted.
Next, check the license scope.
Look for plain permission for commercial video, social advertising, branded content, and client work. For Pinterest campaigns, the license should cover the finished video or motion graphic, not raw music distribution.
Then check proof.
Save the track title, license document, purchase receipt, account name, client name if relevant, and campaign name. If a platform asks for proof, your team should know where to find it.
Free Tools:
What Music Licensing Model Do I Need?
License Fit Checker
What a Pinterest-ready music license should cover
A strong Pinterest music license should cover the way your campaign actually runs.
For a creator, that may mean one video Pin, one paid campaign, and one landing page. For a marketer, it may mean several cutdowns for product launches, seasonal ads, and retargeting campaigns. For a freelancer, it may mean a finished video delivered to a client for the client’s own Pinterest account.
The license should allow the music inside a finished Project. It should also allow edits that fit social production, such as loops, fades, shorter cuts, and timing changes.
Client work needs extra care. The client should receive the finished video with the music embedded, plus a copy of the license. The raw track should stay out of the handoff.
The safer option for paid Pinterest campaigns
For promoted Pins and video campaigns, use royalty-free music with clear commercial and business-use language.
That gives your team a cleaner publishing path. You can pick a track, place it in the campaign asset, save the license proof, and publish with a record of what you used.


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