Is AI Music Royalty-Free? The Honest Answer
"Royalty-free" is a license type, not a property of AI music. Some AI platforms grant genuine royalty-free commercial licenses; others do not. You must check the platform and your plan before using music commercially.
"Is AI music royalty-free?" is the most-searched legal question in this space, and the most misunderstood. The short answer is: it depends entirely on the platform and the plan, not on the fact that AI made it.
Royalty-free means you pay once — via subscription or a one-time fee — and owe no additional per-stream or per-use royalties. It does not mean free, unowned, or universally usable. An AI-generated track from Suno's free tier is not royalty-free commercially; a track from Soundraw's paid plan is. The distinction is contractual.
This page cuts through the confusion so you can make a confident decision before publishing.
What royalty-free actually means
The term comes from the traditional music industry. A royalty is a payment due each time a piece of music is used — per broadcast, per stream, per sync. A royalty-free license front-loads those payments: you pay a subscription or one-time fee, and the licensor waives per-use royalties in exchange.
For AI music platforms, this usually translates to: subscribe to a commercial plan, generate tracks, and use them across your content without additional payments or credit obligations. But "commercial plan" is the load-bearing phrase — free tiers almost never include commercial royalty-free rights.
Platforms that genuinely offer royalty-free commercial licenses
These platforms are purpose-built for royalty-free licensing and have clear, creator-tested terms.
- Soundraw — explicit royalty-free commercial license on paid tiers; broad sync coverage.
- Mubert — generative royalty-free music; Creator and Business plans cover YouTube and social; confirm streaming/broadcast scope.
- AIVA — orchestral and cinematic focus; Standard plan grants commercial rights; higher plans unlock broadcast.
- Artlist / Musicbed (not pure AI but AI-assisted) — subscription royalty-free libraries with strong platform coverage.
Where Suno and Udio stand
Suno and Udio are song generators, not royalty-free libraries by design — but paid tiers grant commercial use rights that function similarly. On Suno's Pro or Premier plan, you get commercial rights to tracks you generate. Udio's Pro plan does the same. The distinction from a dedicated royalty-free engine: the license is tied to the individual account and may have more nuanced rules around third-party delivery.
The ongoing RIAA litigation against both platforms does not affect the validity of user licenses as currently written, but it adds uncertainty about long-term platform stability. For catalog-building commercial work, platforms with a more settled legal status (Soundraw, AIVA, Mubert) carry less risk.
What you still owe even on a royalty-free plan
Royalty-free does not mean obligation-free. Depending on the platform and how you distribute the music, you may still have obligations: some platforms require attribution in video descriptions or audio files; some prohibit resale of the music as a standalone product (you can use it in your video, but not sell it as a track); and some prohibit use in NFTs or blockchain contexts. Read the prohibited-uses section of your plan as carefully as the permitted-uses section.
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Frequently asked
Can I use AI music on YouTube without paying royalties?
Yes — if you use a platform that grants royalty-free commercial rights on your plan. On a qualifying plan from Soundraw, Mubert, or Suno (paid), you can monetize YouTube content without additional royalty payments.
Is AI music in the public domain?
No. Unprotected does not mean public domain in the practical sense — the platform retains contract rights over how you use the output, and other users cannot simply copy your generated tracks. Public domain is a copyright concept; AI music is governed by the platform's license agreement.
Can I sell music I generated on a royalty-free plan?
Usually not as a standalone music product (selling the track itself). Royalty-free licenses typically permit use within a project — video, game, app — not resale of the music as the product. Check for explicit restrictions on music resale.
Does royalty-free AI music trigger Content ID?
It should not if the platform guarantees original, non-derivative output and you have a commercial license. Content ID claims happen when platforms register their catalog or when generated audio accidentally resembles registered works. See our Content ID guide for what to do if a claim appears.