Fast forward to 2026, and apparently, I didn't need to suffer through those garage sessions. I just needed a prompt and a subscription.
If you’ve been anywhere near X (formerly Twitter) or TikTok lately, you’ve seen the explosion of AI music. We aren't talking about those robotic, beeping chiptune sounds from 2023 anymore. We’re talking full-blown, radio-ready vocals that—I swear to you—sound confusingly human.
So, I did what any rational tech enthusiast with too much coffee would do. I spent the last week pitting the heavyweights against each other: Suno and Udio.
I wanted to know: Can they actually write a song that doesn't make me cringe? Or is this just another hype cycle waiting to crash?
Let’s get into it.
Before I humiliate myself by sharing the lyrics I generated, let’s look at who we’re dealing with.
Suno feels like the tool for the masses. It’s fast, the interface is dead simple, and it seems to understand structure really well. You tell it, "Make a sad country song about a truck that runs on tears," and boom—Verse, Chorus, Bridge. Done.
Udio burst onto the scene claiming higher fidelity. It’s a bit more complex. It gives you more control over the generation window (32-second chunks usually), which is great for tweaking but kinda annoying if you just want to hit "Go" and vibe out.
Yeah, there are others like Stable Audio and Soundraw, but honestly? For lyrical songs, Suno and Udio are currently the Godzilla and Kong of this space.
I didn't want to give them an easy prompt like "Lo-fi beats to study to." That’s too easy. Even my toaster could probably generate lo-fi beats at this point.
The Prompt:
"A 1980s power ballad about a software developer who falls in love with a vending machine that ate his dollar. High emotional stakes, soaring guitar solo."
(Don't judge me. It’s for science.)
The Result: Shockingly coherent. Suno nailed the 80s snare sound—you know, that massive GACK sound. The chorus was catchy: "Oh, B4, why did you close the door? / My dollar's gone, I can't take it no more!"
I laughed, but I was also tapping my foot. It structured the song perfectly with a predictable but satisfying intro-verse-chorus progression.
The Result: Sonic excellence, structural chaos. Udio’s audio quality was noticeably crisper. The guitar solo? Face-melting. It sounded like it was recorded in a real studio. However, the lyrics were a bit... garbled. It tried to rhyme "machine" with "screen" but kinda mumbled through it.
Here is the breakdown after I spent roughly $40 in credits testing these things.
| Feature | Suno | Udio |
|---|---|---|
| Speed | Blazing fast (Songs in <1 min) | Slower (Generation takes time) |
| Audio Quality | 8/10 (Good, slightly compressed) | 9.5/10 (Near studio quality) |
| Ease of Use | Beginner friendly | Intermediate/Pro |
| Vocal Clarity | Very High | High (but sometimes hallucinates) |
| Editability | Good "Extend" features | Excellent "In-painting" features |
Here’s the thing nobody tells you about AI music: It gets weird.
On my third attempt with Udio, I asked for a jazz track. Midway through the sax solo, the AI decided to insert a voice whispering "Help me" in the background.
Okay, maybe not exactly that, but it did start speaking in a language that definitely wasn't English. These models are predictive—they predict the next sound wave. Sometimes, they predict gibberish.
Suno is safer here. It rarely goes off the rails, but that also makes it feel a tiny bit more formulaic. If you generate 10 pop songs on Suno, 3 of them will sound vaguely like the same Katy Perry B-side.
Real talk: Copyright is a mess.
Both platforms say that if you pay for the premium tier, you own the songs. You can put them on Spotify. You can monetize them on YouTube.
But—and this is a massive "but"—the legal system hasn't fully caught up. If Suno accidentally generates a melody that sounds exactly like "Sweet Child O' Mine," and you publish it... well, Guns N' Roses' lawyers aren't going to care that an AI did it. They're coming for you.
My advice: Use these tools for background music, content creation, or just for fun. Be very, very careful about trying to become the next Spotify star with purely AI-generated tracks.
Yes! Both platforms let you toggle "Custom Mode" to paste your own lyrics. I pasted a grocery list into Suno as a death metal song. It was aggressive. "EGGS AND MILK!" sounded terrifying.
If you just need instrumental beats for a YouTube video, Udio wins on fidelity. The instrumentals sound richer.
Yup. Both offer free daily credits. You usually can't use the free songs commercially, though. Read the fine print, folks.
After generating about 50 songs and annoying my neighbors with power ballads about vending machines, here is my take.
Use Suno if:
Use Udio if:
My Pick: Currently, I’m sticking with Suno for the fun factor. It just "gets it" faster. But watching Udio update is like watching a prodigy learn to play piano—it’s getting scary good, scary fast.
Now, if you’ll excuse me, I have a country album about Javascript errors to finish.
(Side note: If anyone actually listens to the "404 Not Found Blues," let me know on Twitter. I might actually drop the SoundCloud link.)
Disclaimer: AI tools evolve faster than I can type. Prices and features mentioned are accurate as of late 2025. Always check the official sites for the latest details.