How to Use Suno: A Practitioner's Getting-Started Guide
Suno turns a short text description, or a set of your own lyrics, into a complete song with vocals, instrumentation, and full production in under a minute. The basic loop is easy to start and free to try, but the parts that matter most, how the daily credits work, how to refine a track instead of re-rolling it, and what you are actually allowed to do with the result, are not obvious from the create screen. This guide walks the whole path: signing up, describing a song, generating on the free plan, refining with stems and covers, and the commercial-use rules that decide whether your track is yours to sell.
Before anything else: Suno is free to start. The free plan gives you 50 credits that renew every day, which Suno estimates at roughly ten songs daily. But free output is for personal, non-commercial use only and must credit Suno. We cover what changes on paid plans below.
Before You Start
Getting into Suno is quick. You create one account, and that login works across the web app and the mobile apps. The only real gatekeeping is age, and the decision you will face later about whether you need a paid plan for what you intend to do with the music.
One thing to settle early: decide whether your songs will ever be used commercially. Free output is personal and non-commercial only. If you might publish, sell, or monetize a track, you need a paid plan from the start, because the rights attach to the plan you are on when the song is generated.
Describe the Song You Want
Everything starts from a description. In the simplest case you type a genre, a mood, and a theme, for example a mellow lo-fi track about a rainy commute, and Suno fills in the rest. If you would rather control the words, you can paste your own lyrics and let Suno write only the music and vocals around them.
Granular controls
When the simple description is not enough, Suno exposes finer controls so you can steer the result instead of re-rolling and hoping. These are the levers worth knowing on your first session.
| Control | What It Does |
|---|---|
| Voices | Choose the vocal character that performs the song |
| Inspo | Seed the generation with a reference idea or vibe to aim for |
| Exclusions | Tell Suno what to keep out, such as a genre or instrument you do not want |
| Vocal gender | Bias the vocal toward a masculine or feminine performance |
| Weirdness / Style sliders | Dial how experimental or how strongly styled the output is |
When you are stuck for words
If a blank prompt box is intimidating, Suno has two assists. Magic Song Descriptions generates a starting description for you, and Co-write with Suno helps you develop lyrics collaboratively. Both are good ways to learn what kinds of descriptions produce the results you like before you start writing your own from scratch.
Generate on Free Credits
Once your description is ready, you generate. On the free plan this draws from a pool of 50 credits that renew every day. Suno estimates a single song at roughly five credits, which is where the figure of about ten songs a day comes from. Both numbers are Suno's own estimates, not a fixed cost, so a particularly long or complex generation can use more.
The free plan generates through a shared queue with up to four concurrent jobs across all free users, so during busy periods a generation can take a little longer to come back. The free model is v4.5-all, which Suno positions as its best free model. Paid plans move you to a priority queue and give you the newer models, but for learning the workflow the free model is more than capable.
Credits, briefly: free credits renew daily and do not carry over. On paid plans, monthly subscription credits also do not roll over, but any top-up credits you purchase separately do not expire while your subscription stays active.
Refine Your Track
A first generation is rarely the final track, and Suno gives you several ways to shape it rather than starting over. The fastest is to regenerate the same prompt for a fresh take, but the more useful tools change a song you already like instead of replacing it.
- Extend continues a song past its current ending so a short clip becomes a full-length track.
- Cover re-performs an existing song in a new style while keeping its structure.
- Adjust speed changes the tempo of the result.
- Add vocals or instrumentals layers a vocal line or backing onto an existing piece.
- Replace or add sections swaps out or inserts a part, which is the precise edit you reach for when one verse or bridge is the only problem.
Basic editing such as cropping and fading is available on the free plan. The more advanced section editing, replacing or adding a specific part rather than the whole song, is a paid feature. The pattern is the same one that experienced users settle into: keep the take you like, then surgically fix the part that is wrong instead of gambling a fresh generation and losing what worked.
Your First Song, Step by Step
Here is the loop end to end. The same steps apply whether you are on the web app or the mobile app, because both share the same account and the same song library.
Step 1: Sign up
Create an account at suno.com or in the iOS or Android app. You are on the free plan by default, with daily credits ready to use.
Step 2: Describe the song
Type a genre, mood, and theme, or paste your own lyrics. Use the granular controls or the Magic Song Descriptions assist if you want help shaping the idea.
Step 3: Generate
Run the generation. It spends about five credits and returns a complete song, usually in under a minute, though the shared free queue can add a short wait.
Step 4: Refine
If the result is close but not right, extend it, cover it in a new style, adjust the speed, or regenerate. Keep the version you like best.
Step 5: Download or go further
Download the finished track to share, or, on a paid plan, split it into stems and take it into a DAW for your own mixing.
Going Deeper on a Paid Plan
Most of Suno's production-grade tools sit behind the two paid plans. The jump matters less for casual listening and more for anyone who wants to take a generated song into real music software and finish it properly.
What Pro adds
The Pro plan ($10 per month, or $8 per month billed yearly) grants commercial-use rights for new songs and adds the advanced models (v4, v4.5, v4.5+, v5, and v5.5). The standout production feature is stems: you can split a song into up to twelve time-aligned WAV files, vocals and instruments separated, and import them into a DAW such as Ableton or Logic for your own mix. Pro also adds personas, the ability to record or upload your own voice, custom v5.5 tuning from your own audio, advanced section editing, and a priority queue.
What Premier adds
The Premier plan ($30 per month, or $24 per month billed yearly) includes everything in Pro and adds Suno Studio, a web-based generative audio workstation with a multitrack editor and MIDI export. Studio is the closest Suno comes to a conventional production environment, blending AI generation with hands-on arrangement.
| Capability | Free | Pro | Premier |
|---|---|---|---|
| Price per month | $0 | $10 ($8 yearly) | $30 ($24 yearly) |
| Credits | 50 / day | 2,500 / mo | 10,000 / mo |
| Commercial use | No | Yes | Yes |
| WAV stems | No | Up to 12 | Up to 12 |
| Suno Studio | No | No | Yes |
Plan details are vendor-reported and verified June 9, 2026. Credit-to-song estimates are Suno's own. Confirm current pricing at suno.com/pricing.
Download, and Mind the Rights
Downloading a finished song is the easy part. The harder part is knowing what you are allowed to do with it, because the answer depends entirely on which plan you were on when the song was generated.
Two more rules are worth knowing before you publish. You may only create a voice model of your own voice; cloning someone else's voice is prohibited. And if you enable remixing, a remix is jointly and equally owned by you and the remixer, and remixes stay personal and non-commercial with Suno attribution, even for paid users.
Troubleshooting
These are the issues newcomers run into most often, with the fix for each.