For the past two years, REPUBLIC has set a new industry-leading mark for current market share, finishing 2023 at 13.47% and 2024 at 14.90% — numbers that were well above the rest of the competition. In 2025, they went even better, finishing the year at a 16.04% current share, closer to that of the entire independent music community by distribution (20.17%) than its nearest competitor, Interscope Geffen A&M (9.62%), which finished in second place.
REPUBLIC — whose market share includes that of Island (2.81%), Big Loud (2.51%), Mercury (0.73%) and indie distributor Imperial (0.68%) — was buoyed by the record-shattering release of Taylor Swift’s The Life of a Showgirl, released Oct. 3. That album debuted at a modern-day unprecedented mark of 4.002 million equivalent album units in its first week of availability, a number that would have, in just seven days, made it the second-biggest album of the year. It ultimately finished 2025 with 5.61 million equivalent album units, one of just two albums to cross the 5 million threshold. The other was Morgan Wallen’s gigantic I’m The Problem, also a REPUBLIC release in partnership with Big Loud and Mercury, which finished the year at 5.13 million units, securing REPUBLIC yet another one-two punch and a clear market share lead in the industry. No other album in 2025 surpassed 2.6 million units.
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Swift’s release was so monumental that in the fourth quarter alone, the album accounted for 9.07% of the current market share for the period, with REPUBLIC’s fourth-quarter current market share a jaw-dropping 22.50% — not far off Sony’s 23.94% for the quarter. For the full year, Swift’s album accounted for 2.49% current share, despite being out for just three months.
At this point, it almost seems a given that REPUBLIC, with its stable of modern-day superstars, will run away with the No. 1 current market share rankings slot, as it has for the past four years. But with established stars, big records and breakout upstarts, several other labels have made strides to try to close the gap — only for Swift, REPUBLIC’s ace in the hole, to upend things once again, while Wallen, the Kpop Demon Hunters soundtrack and Sabrina Carpenter’s 2024 Island release Short N Sweet also finished the year among the top 10 albums.
In second place, Interscope’s 9.62% was a dip from last year’s 10.72% current share, but it was still enough for a dominant runner-up position, with Kendrick Lamar’s GNX and Billie Eilish’s Hit Me Hard And Soft — both initially released in 2024 — still putting up big numbers alongside Lady Gaga’s Grammy-nominated MAYHEM album. (IGA’s share includes Verve Label Group.) Due to parent company Universal Music Group’s structure, in which REPUBLIC Collective also includes Def Jam, and Interscope Capitol also includes Capitol Music Group (and with it, Motown/Quality Control, Capitol Christian, Blue Note, Astralwerks and Virgin), REPUBLIC Collective’s current market share for 2025 came out to 16.84%, while Interscope Capitol came in at 14.02%.
Those two powerhouse divisions helped fuel UMG’s current market share growth to 37.48% for 2025, up from 36.90% through 2024. In second place among the label groups, Sony Music Entertainment held steady year over year, hitting 25.92% current share (from 25.96% in 2024), with Warner Music Group growing slightly year over year, to 16.43% from 16.33% in 2024. The indies, collectively, came in at 20.17% current share by distribution ownership, down from 20.81% in 2024. By label ownership, the indies remained the largest sector of the business at north of 38%.
Among the individual labels, Atlantic Music Group — which includes 300 Entertainment and 10K Projects — finished the year on a strong note, growing quarter by quarter from 5.64% current share in 2024 to a 7.73% current share at the end of 2025, thanks to the addition of 10K into its share. And while 10K’s 1.52% — brought under Atlantic in Luminate’s system after the second quarter — certainly didn’t hurt, Atlantic’s year-over-year gain even without it was the biggest of any label other than REPUBLIC. Breakout years for Alex Warren, Ravyn Lenae and The Marías, plus No. 1 albums from Cardi B and Twenty One Pilots and hits from Rosé and Bruno Mars, helped Atlantic there.
In fourth place is Warner Records, which at a 5.78% current share has come back down to earth slightly after a blockbuster 2024, when it finished at 6.55%, though it still is on a hot streak (and an early January 2026 album from Zach Bryan bodes well for the beginning of this year). Columbia Records, largely even at 4.51% (down from 4.59% last year), maintains its position in fifth place, while Capitol Music Group jumps into sixth, leapfrogging RCA to a 4.40% current share from last year’s 3.98%. RCA, with SZA’s momentum not slowing down and a blockbuster album from Tate McRae, came in seventh at 4.05%.
Rounding out the top 10 is a trio of Sony Music labels: Alamo, at 2.37%, came in eighth, steadily growing after 2024’s 2.11% finish; while Sony Latin (2.01%) and Sony Nashville (1.74%) finished in ninth and 10th, respectively, with the latter moving into the top 10 after just barely missing the cut in 2024.
In terms of overall market share — which combines current and catalog releases — REPUBLIC also came in first, with an industry-leading 10.66%, in front of Interscope Geffen A&M’s 9.85% — powering Universal’s mammoth 38.96%, up from 38.61% last year. In third, Atlantic Music Group’s 8.48% was a jump from last year’s 7.63%, while Warner Records (in fourth place) was also up, jumping to 6.98% from 6.88%. Capitol Music Group moved up to fifth place with 5.98%, while Columbia slipped slightly to sixth with 5.33%. RCA remained in seventh, up slightly to 5.06%, while Epic (2.43%), Sony Nashville (1.96%) and Concord (1.81%) rounded out the top 10. Among the label groups, Sony Music ticked up to 27.48% from 27.38% last year, while Warner Music Group also improved, rising to 18.87% from 18.39%. Those gains came as the indies dipped to 14.69% by distribution, down from 15.62% in 2024.
In terms of catalog share, which counts releases older than 18 months, Interscope Geffen A&M came in first with 9.92%, leading second place REPUBLIC’s 8.99% and Atlantic Music Group’s 8.71%. Warner Records, in fourth, reached 7.36%, up from a flat 7% last year, while Capitol, in fifth, came in at 6.47%. Columbia’s 5.58% was good for sixth, just edging out RCA’s 5.38% in seventh. Rounding out the top 10 are Epic (2.69%), Concord (2.13%) and Def Jam (2.03%). Universal’s 39.42% share led the industry among label groups, while Sony (27.96%), Warner (19.63%) and the indies (12.99%) followed.
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