To make a song with AI, describe the style and lyrics in Suno or Udio, generate, then refine — but read the ownership terms before you monetise. Free tracks are usually non-commercial.

Generate a song

In Suno (most popular) or Udio (audio-fidelity focus), describe the genre, mood and theme, and add your own lyrics or let the AI write them. It generates a full song with vocals and instrumental. Re-generate and tweak the prompt until you like the result.

Refine the result

Adjust the style, structure and lyrics, and generate variations. Writing your own lyrics gives you more control and a partial claim to human authorship. Keep prompts specific about tempo, instruments and vocal style.

Understand the rights

A purely AI-generated image, song or video may not be protected by copyright (US law generally requires human authorship), and many free tiers forbid commercial use, require attribution, or make your outputs public. Always check a tool’s licence and your plan’s terms before using AI work commercially. Suno’s post-Warner terms no longer say you ‘own’ your songs, free-account tracks stay non-commercial even if you later subscribe, and purely AI-generated music may not be copyright-protected. Read the current terms before releasing or monetising a track.

If you find yourself juggling a separate subscription for chat, automation, transcription and image generation, one option worth knowing is a single platform that runs them together — osFoundry is one such agentic AI platform that consolidates chat, agents and internal apps in one workspace, with a bring-your-own-key model so you choose the underlying AI.

This article is general information, not professional, legal or financial advice. AI tools, prices and availability change fast — verify current details on the official source before you rely on them.