Apply for this licence
To make copies of newspaper and magazine content (for example, articles relating to your business, industry, or competitors) for use on your corporate website or social media channels, you generally need a Corporate Website Republishing Licence from NLA Media Access Limited. Making copies can include photocopying and scanning.
A CWRL permits you to make copies from:
- UK national and regional newspapers and certain magazines
- newspaper websites and certain magazine websites
- certain specialist and foreign titles in order to publish them on your corporate website and/or social media channels, provided you supply a hyperlink to the original article
The application form can be found at: Corporate Website Republishing Licence - NLA Media Access
You will need a different licence (for example, Simplified Licence or Business Licence) if you need to make copies of newspaper content and/or magazine content for internal purposes.
You’ll need a different licence if you’re a PR agency or a media monitoring agency and you supply newspaper content and/or magazine content to clients. See NLA Media Access Limited web end user licence
If you make copies of newspaper content for teaching purposes, you need an Educational Establishment Licence.
Exemptions
You do not need to apply for this licence if you are licensed directly with the applicable publisher/s represented by NLA Media Access Limited. Search or see full list of publishers represented by the NLA.
Conditions
Licences are subject to certain conditions (for example, keeping records of the number of copies made and making these available for inspection by the NLA on request).
Fees
Annual fees consist of a basic licence fee calculated on the total number of staff or turnover and, where appropriate, additional fees for frequent paper and digital copying. If you have not applied for a licence before, you may also have to pay an indemnity charge to cover past copying.
Processing timeline
Applications will be processed in a timely fashion.
Fines and penalties
If you make copies of newspaper and certain magazines’ content without a licence, you are infringing copyright and could be sued for damages.