This is one of the most important questions for Australian businesses playing background music and it is also one of the easiest to blur.
A OneMusic licence is a key part of legal background music use in Australia. It gives businesses permission from copyright owners to play the vast majority of commercial music publicly in their venue, store, salon, office or practice, depending on the type of cover required.
That is the licensing side of the picture. It matters a lot. It just does not cover everything.
Why this matters in plain English
If a business plays music where customers, visitors or staff can hear it, the venue, store or pratice is usually using music publicly. That is why permission is usually needed.
OneMusic brings together the rights managed by APRA AMCOS and PPCA, which helps create a simpler licensing path for many common business uses of music in Australia.
In everyday terms, that means the licence is what usually gives the venue permission to play commercial music as part of the business environment.
What it usually covers in a business
In retail, it can cover background music on the shop floor.
In hospitality, including cafes, restaurants and QSR, pubs, bars and clubs, it can cover music across breakfast, lunch, dinner and late trade depending on the venue type and licence category.
In professional services such as hairdressers and beauty salons, day spas and medical practices including doctors and dentists, it can cover music in reception areas, waiting rooms and customer-facing spaces.
The setting changes, but the principle is the same. The licence covers the public performance side of using music in the business.
This is the part many businesses miss.
A OneMusic licence does not supply the music itself. OneMusic says this clearly in its FAQs. It licences the rights to play the vast majority of commercial music in businesses around Australia, regardless of how that music is sourced.
It also does not override the terms of personal digital music services. OneMusic states this directly in relation to personal digital music services used in business contexts.
If a business uses a personal streaming account that is only licensed for personal, non-commercial use, a OneMusic licence does not fix that issue. The licence and the music source are two separate parts of the setup.
This is why businesses can still end up exposed or confused even when they have tried to do the right thing.
- It does not choose playlists for your brand.
- It does not help the venue sound right at different times of day.
- It does not stop staff from relying on personal phones or ad hoc music choices.
- It does not manage consistency across multiple locations.
Those are music source, curation and operating questions. They sit alongside licensing, not inside it.
Where background music suppliers fit
OneMusic also explains that some background music suppliers may include a OneMusic licence as part of their service package in certain arrangements.
That is important because many businesses assume they always need to manage the music platform and the licence as two completely separate things.
POSmusic is listed by OneMusic as a background music supplier. For eligible business types, POSmusic can include the relevant OneMusic licence during sign-up so music access and licensing are handled together in a more streamlined way.
- OneMusic covers the permission to play music publicly in your business.
- A business music platform like POSmusic covers access to the music and the practical day-to-day use of it in the business.
- You need both pieces to line up.
Why this is useful for decision-making
Once businesses understand that split, better decisions usually follow.
- They stop assuming a paid personal app must be fine.
- They stop thinking a licence alone solves the whole setup.
They start asking better questions about suitability, control, consistency and what kind of music environment the business actually needs.
Where POSmusic helps
POSmusic is built for business use, with professionally curated playlists and music tools designed for real commercial spaces. For eligible business types, the OneMusic licence can be added during sign-up too.
That gives businesses a clearer path than trying to stitch together personal apps, separate licensing admin and inconsistent in-store habits.
It covers the permission side of public music use. It does not replace the need for a music source that is suitable for business use. Once that distinction is clear, the whole category becomes easier to navigate.
A: No. OneMusic licences the rights to play music publicly. It does not supply the music source.
A: In some arrangements, yes. OneMusic says some background music suppliers may include a OneMusic licence as part of their package.
A: It covers the permission to play music publicly in your business. A business music platform covers the music source and the practical use of it in the venue.