Song
Lithium
Nirvana · Nevermind · 1991
high confidence
artist-side split is modeled + gross track revenue is separated. Why?
The headline number is the modeled artist-side annual share for this recording when split data exists.
Short Answer
How much money does Lithium make?
Lithium by Nirvana is modeled at $330K-$990K/year per year on the artist side, with gross track revenue and ownership context separated below.
Takeaway: Lithium is one of the stronger modeled catalog earners here because replay demand and ownership context both support a durable annual range.
This song holds value through a recognizable core riff or chorus, strong emotional payoff, and steady replay.
Did You Know?
- Currently ranks around the top 25% of tracked songs by modeled artist-side earnings
- Released in 1991 and still shows earnings power roughly 35 years later
- Ranks #3 among 3 tracked songs for Nirvana
- 3 tracks on the linked album page
- External listening links available
- high confidence estimate
Why It Still Works
- Classic replay value and catalog streaming keep major rock songs relevant.
- Cultural familiarity supports long-tail listener demand.
- Sync placements and live-culture recognition help extend the song's revenue life.
Lithium sits in the top 25% of tracked songs on the site by modeled artist-side earnings.
How It Compares
Lithium is compared against nearby songs in the catalog based on artist overlap, era, genre, and modeled earnings range.
Revenue Breakdown
Bars reflect modeled annual midpoint ranges, not audited royalty statements.
Listen
Preview audio is not available for this song right now.
More Questions About Lithium
How much did Lithium make in total?
Lithium does not have a public lifetime total, so this page stays focused on modeled annual earnings instead of claiming an audited career total.
How much does Lithium make per stream?
Lithium does not have a single public per-stream rate because payouts vary by platform, territory, subscription tier, and contract structure. The estimate here is modeled from aggregate streaming, licensing, and catalog behavior instead.
Who owns Lithium?
Lithium is modeled from public-facing catalog behavior and conservative rights-split assumptions, not from audited royalty statements.
Show ownership and assumptions
Lithium is modeled from public-facing catalog behavior and conservative rights-split assumptions, not from audited royalty statements.
Supporting Revenue Context
Assumptions: Estimate keeps the current headline range as the artist-side figure and models gross track, label, publishing, and songwriter lanes from that conservative annual range.
Notes: Lithium is modeled from public-facing catalog behavior and conservative rights-split assumptions, not from audited royalty statements.
Split-aware estimate
The headline number is the modeled artist-side annual share for this recording when split data exists.