A "usage license" is the single most misunderstood line in a brand deal. Creators assume it means selling the video; brands assume it means "use it however we want." Both are wrong, and the gap between those two assumptions is exactly where money leaks and disputes start. Here's what a UGC usage license actually is — in plain language — and the dimensions that decide what it's worth.
What a UGC usage license actually is
A UGC usage license is a brand's permission to USE a piece of your content in defined ways, for a defined time. It grants use, not ownership. You made the video; you still own the video. The license is a set of rights carved out of that ownership and handed to one brand under specific limits.
The closest everyday analogy is renting versus buying. A tenant can live in the apartment, but they don't own the building, can't knock down walls, and have to move out when the lease ends. A usage license works the same way: the brand gets to run your content within the agreed scope, and every use outside that scope is still yours to grant — or charge for — separately.
Why you license rights instead of selling the video
This is the part that makes creators money. Because a license is scoped, the same piece of content can be licensed narrowly and cheaply, or broadly and expensively — and it can be licensed again over its life.
- A brand that only needs it on their own Instagram grid is buying a small, cheap right.
- A brand that wants to pour ad spend behind it, run it on five platforms, and lock you out of competitors for a year is buying a much larger right — and pays accordingly.
More usage equals more money. If you "sold the video outright," you'd get one flat number and lose all future upside. Licensing lets the price track the value the brand actually extracts. For the mechanics of pricing each layer, see how to charge for usage rights.
The dimensions that define a usage license
Every usage license is really the sum of a few independent settings. Change any one and the value changes:
- Channels / platforms. Where it can run — the brand's TikTok, Instagram, YouTube, website, email, retail screens. "Instagram only" is a smaller license than "all platforms."
- Organic vs. paid ads. Organic means posting on owned channels. Paid means putting ad budget behind it. Paid is a heavier, separately priced right — a brand with organic-only rights can't legally run your content as an ad.
- Term / duration. How long the rights last — 3, 6, 12 months, or perpetual. A perpetual license never expires and should cost far more, because you're surrendering the ability to re-license that content forever.
- Territory. Where in the world the content can run — one country, a region, or worldwide. Global rights are broader than local ones.
- Exclusivity. Whether you're barred from working with the brand's competitors for the term. That's real lost income and belongs on its own line, never a freebie.
- Whitelisting. Running ads from YOUR handle rather than the brand's — a distinct, higher-value right with its own pricing logic.
What a good usage license spells out
A clear license leaves nothing to "we assumed." At minimum it names:
- The exact platforms and channels covered.
- Organic, paid, or both.
- The start date and the term (or "perpetual").
- The territory.
- Exclusivity — yes/no, scope, and how long.
- Whitelisting — included or not.
The golden rule: anything not explicitly granted is not granted. Silence defaults in the creator's favor — but only if the scope is written down somewhere both sides can point to later.
A plain-language example
Say a skincare brand licenses one of your videos like this: "Organic use on the brand's own TikTok and Instagram, United States only, 6 months, non-exclusive, no paid ads."
That means they can post it on those two accounts, in the US, for half a year. They cannot run it as an ad, cannot use it on YouTube, cannot stop you from working with another skincare brand, and their rights end at month six. If they later want to boost it as an ad, that's a new right — and a new fee. That single sentence is a complete, priceable usage license.
How usage licenses work on Plug
Plug is your back office for exactly this. When you agree a deal, the usage terms — platforms, organic/paid, term, territory, exclusivity — are captured as structured license terms, and each attaches to a verifiable license certificate both sides can check later. No reconstructing a DM thread six months on. To model a specific scope before you quote it, run the Usage-Rights Calculator, or see the full picture on content licensing on Plug.
License, don't liquidate. Selling your content outright is a one-time check; licensing it turns one video into a right you can grant narrowly now and re-license later. Scope it, write it down, and let the price follow the usage.
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