When to Pitch to DSPs: A Timeline Guide
By Team ·
When to Pitch to DSPs: A Timeline Guide
Getting on an editorial playlist can transform a release. But timing your pitch wrong — too early, too late, or with the wrong information — means your track never gets heard by the curators who matter. Here's exactly when and how to pitch to each major platform.
Understanding the Pitch Window
Every DSP has a different timeline for reviewing pitches. The general rule: submit your pitch at least 4 weeks before release day, but ideally 6-8 weeks out for major releases.
Why so early? Editorial teams at Spotify, Apple Music, and others review thousands of submissions weekly. They need time to:
- Listen to your track
- Evaluate it against their playlist strategy
- Schedule it if selected
- Coordinate with their marketing team for New Music Friday or equivalent features
Platform-by-Platform Breakdown
Spotify for Artists
- When to pitch: 7 days to 4 weeks before release
- Where: Spotify for Artists dashboard → Music → Upcoming → Pitch a Song
- What they want: Unreleased track, genre/mood tags, description of the song's story, marketing plans
- Pro tip: Only pitch ONE song per release. Pick your lead single. Spotify's algorithm favors focused pitches.
Apple Music for Artists
- When to pitch: At least 2 weeks before release (earlier is better)
- Where: Apple Music for Artists → Share Your Release
- What they want: Release metadata, marketing context, press coverage, social proof
- Pro tip: Apple's editorial team is smaller but more hands-on. A personal story about the music resonates more than streaming numbers.
Amazon Music
- When to pitch: 3-4 weeks before release
- Where: Amazon Music for Artists dashboard
- What they want: Release info, audience demographics, marketing plans
- Pro tip: Amazon values exclusives and first-listen opportunities. If you can offer a bonus track or early access, mention it.
YouTube Music
- When to pitch: 2-3 weeks before release
- Where: YouTube Studio → Music tab
- What they want: Music video or visualizer, channel engagement metrics
- Pro tip: Having a music video ready at release significantly increases your chances. Premieres perform especially well.
Tidal
- When to pitch: 3-4 weeks before release
- Where: Via distributor or Tidal artist portal
- What they want: High-quality audio (MQA or Dolby Atmos if available), artist story
- Pro tip: Tidal's audience skews toward audiophiles. If you have a hi-res master, lead with that.
The Ideal Pitch Timeline
Here's a week-by-week breakdown for a single release:
| Week | Action |
|---|---|
| 8 weeks out | Finalize master and metadata. Upload to distributor. |
| 6 weeks out | Submit Spotify pitch. Begin Apple Music submission. |
| 4 weeks out | Submit to Amazon, Tidal, YouTube Music. Start pre-save campaign. |
| 3 weeks out | Follow up with distributor on pitch status. Begin social teasers. |
| 2 weeks out | Check pitch results. Adjust marketing strategy based on playlist confirmations. |
| 1 week out | Final push on pre-saves. Coordinate release day plan with team. |
| Release day | Monitor playlist placements. Share playlist links. Engage with fans. |
What Makes a Great Pitch
Curators receive thousands of pitches. Here's what makes yours stand out:
- Be specific about genre and mood — Don't just say "pop." Say "upbeat indie-pop with 80s synth influences, similar to The 1975."
- Tell the story — Why does this song matter? What inspired it? Curators connect with narrative.
- Show your marketing plan — Playlist curators want to know you'll drive traffic. Mention your social following, press coverage, tour dates, or TikTok strategy.
- Include social proof — Previous playlist placements, notable streams, press features, sync placements.
- Keep it concise — Curators spend 30 seconds on a pitch. Get to the point.
Common Pitching Mistakes
- Pitching too late — If your release is next week, it's already too late for most editorial playlists.
- Pitching every song — Focus on your strongest single. Quality over quantity.
- Generic descriptions — "This is a great song" tells curators nothing. Be specific and authentic.
- Ignoring metadata — Wrong genre tags, missing ISRC codes, or incomplete credits hurt your chances.
- Not following up — Your distributor may have relationships with curators. Ask them to amplify your pitch.
Team's timeline feature helps you track every pitch deadline, follow-up, and playlist confirmation in one place. Never miss a pitch window again. Join the waitlist to get early access.