Suno Commercial Use: What You Can (and Can't) Do With Your Tracks
Suno grants commercial rights on paid plans. Free-tier tracks are personal use only. Paid tiers allow monetized publishing, with the scope of client and reseller rights scaling by plan level.
The most common costly mistake in AI music is treating "I generated this" as equivalent to "I own and can commercially use this." With Suno, the commercial rights question depends entirely on which plan you're on, and the answer is not the same across all commercial use cases.
This page is a practical breakdown of Suno's commercial licensing framework — what is permitted, what requires a higher tier, and the specific scenarios most creators get wrong. We cover YouTube monetization, client delivery, distribution platform releases, and broadcast use. For the exact current terms, always check Suno's license page, which updates with model releases.
One ground rule to start: AI-generated music copyright is still being actively litigated in multiple jurisdictions. As of mid-2026, the U.S. Copyright Office has issued guidance that AI-generated music with no meaningful human creative input is not copyrightable by the user. Suno's commercial license grants you the right to use the output commercially, not necessarily the right to register a copyright claim over it.
Free tier: zero commercial use
Free-tier Suno tracks cannot be used commercially, full stop. This includes: monetized YouTube videos, TikTok Creator Marketplace programs, paid client deliverables, sync licensing, music distribution platform releases, and any commercial broadcast context. If your work will generate any revenue or reach a paying client, you need a paid plan before generating the tracks you intend to use.
Paid plan commercial rights: what you get
Paid Suno plans grant a commercial license over the tracks you generate. The scope of that license is the key variable.
Personal commercial use (entry and Pro tiers): Covers your own monetized content — YouTube, Spotify distribution, personal social media, merchandise with your tracks. This is the use case most individual creators need.
Client and professional use (Pro and Premier tiers): Covers delivering tracks to clients as a paid professional, licensing music for third-party projects, and in some cases broadcast and sync. If you're a producer or sound designer delivering AI music to paying clients, confirm your plan covers this before taking the job.
- YouTube monetization — permitted on any paid plan with commercial rights.
- Spotify/DistroKid release — permitted on qualifying paid plans; check distributor AI policy separately.
- Client delivery — typically requires Pro or higher; confirm before invoicing.
- Sync licensing — permitted on plans with full commercial grant; disclose AI origin if required.
- Broadcast — check with broadcaster; some require additional licensing regardless of Suno plan.
Copyright ownership: the nuanced reality
Suno's terms grant you a license to use the output commercially, but the copyright question is separate from the license question. As of mid-2026, U.S. courts and the Copyright Office have held that AI-generated works without substantial human creative authorship cannot be federally copyrighted. Suno's commercial license allows you to use and publish the music; it does not guarantee you can register a copyright on it or defend an infringement claim against a third party who copies it.
For most commercial use cases — scoring your own content, licensing for a client project — this is a non-issue in practice. For use cases where you intend to register and enforce copyright on a released recording, consult an entertainment attorney. The law is actively evolving.
Distribution platforms and AI music policies
Even with a Suno commercial license, distribution platforms have their own AI disclosure and acceptance policies. DistroKid, TuneCore, and others have introduced AI disclosure requirements. Some distributors will reject or remove tracks identified as predominantly AI-generated without proper disclosure. Before releasing Suno tracks on streaming platforms, check the distributor's current AI policy and disclose your generation method accurately. This is separate from Suno's licensing — it is a distributor requirement.
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Frequently asked
Can I sell Suno music on Spotify?
On a qualifying paid plan, yes — Suno grants the commercial rights. You must also comply with your distributor's AI disclosure policies, and federal copyright registration on AI-generated music is not currently available in the U.S.
Can I use Suno music in a commercial for a client?
On Pro or Premier plans, yes. Entry-level paid tiers may limit commercial rights to personal use only. Confirm your plan covers client delivery before taking the job.
Does Suno own my tracks?
On paid plans, Suno grants you a commercial license and does not claim ownership in the practical sense. However, the copyright status of AI-generated music is legally complex — AI content without human authorship is not currently registrable for copyright in the U.S.
Can I use Suno music in a film without crediting Suno?
On qualifying plans, commercial use in film is permitted and attribution is not typically required. Check the specific tier terms, as lower tiers may have attribution requirements.
What happens to my tracks if I cancel Suno?
You keep the audio files you downloaded. The commercial license grant you received at time of generation typically remains valid for tracks generated during your paid subscription period — but read the current terms carefully, as this is a nuanced area.