In a small hotel, if I rented a television to a guest would I still be liable to pay the PRS fee? If not, what legal requirements would I have to satisfy to provide a rental service?
I do have a television licence which covers television programme transmissions in all my bedrooms, the PRS licence costs over �100 and is payable for my guests to listen to music played during adverts. Can't get out of it by using a video/DVD recorder because whatever you watch could play music too.
That's right you don't need a license for the tv from PRS
But if in your small hotel, say in the foyer you play music to welcome the guests, then you have to pay PRS a license fee. This is depending on the size of your hotel.
Tell him to put that in writing before you pay......then don't pay! You're being conned! Would love to see PRS in Court as know several musicians who get nowt from PRS!
It is my understanding that a PRS licence is required for all music played in public. This includes music played by any means, including live performance, CD, radio, TV, on telephone systems, internet, plus many more.
The operative word here is public....surely a guest bedroom is a temporary place of residence and hence not a public place. That is how it is defined in law as part of the smoking ban regulations - surely the same thing would apply here ??