The AI music generation market consolidated harder than most categories in 2026. Suno hit two million paid subscribers and three hundred million in ARR. Udio held the audiophile and instrumental fidelity lane. Riffusion shut down its consumer product (Producer) in February 2026, leaving only the API-first developer offering.
We generated the same three tracks across the surviving platforms and the gap by genre is sharper than the marketing pages suggest. The right tool depends almost entirely on what you're trying to ship.
The Three AI Music Tools That Survived 2026
The shortlist is genuinely short. Suno V5 is the consumer leader by a wide margin. Udio holds the quality-focused producer crowd. Riffusion's API is the developer-only option for embedding music generation in your own product.
Other tools exist (AIVA for classical work, Mubert for ambient loops, Boomy for casual creators) but none are competing at the same quality tier. The category has clear leaders.
If you want a song with vocals, you want Suno. If you want a polished instrumental, you want Udio. Everything else is a smaller decision than that one.
Suno V5: The Vocal Quality Lead
Suno V5 (current as of mid-2026) produces vocal performances that are genuinely indistinguishable from human singers on a first listen. Natural vibrato, audible breath, phrasing variations, and emotional delivery all land. The category-leading vocal quality is the reason Suno owns the consumer market.
The capability range is broad. Pop, rock, hip-hop, country, R&B, electronic, all handled at high quality. The genre flexibility is wider than Udio's and the lyric-driven workflow is faster to iterate on.
The other Suno strength is the built-in DAW. Suno Studio inside the platform lets you edit generated tracks, layer stems, refine sections, and refine outputs without exporting. For non-producer users this closes a workflow gap that would otherwise require pulling into a separate audio editor.
Track length is generated up to four minutes per generation, which is enough for most consumer use cases. The export quality is 44.1kHz, slightly below Udio's 48kHz, but the difference is inaudible to human ears in real production contexts.
Udio: Instrumental Fidelity And The Songs-Per-Credit Edge
Udio is the producer's pick. The instrumental separation, the mix clarity, and the individual instrument fidelity all beat Suno noticeably. Where Suno's pop tracks feel like polished consumer music, Udio's feel like properly mixed studio recordings.
The fidelity gap matters most on instrumental tracks. Cinematic beds, electronic instrumentals, jazz arrangements, and orchestral work all sound noticeably better from Udio. The bass is tighter, the high end is cleaner, and individual instruments occupy their own space in the mix.
The Udio editing tools include inpainting, the ability to fix a specific section of a track without regenerating the whole song. For producers iterating on a specific bridge or chorus, this saves enormous time.
The trade is vocal quality. Udio's vocals are competent but lack the personality and emotional range of Suno V5's. For instrumental-first work this doesn't matter. For songwriter-driven work with vocals as the centerpiece, Suno wins.
The other Udio trade is generation time. Tracks take ninety-plus seconds per generation, noticeably slower than Suno. For iterative workflows the friction adds up.
Riffusion: The API-First Bet For Builders
Riffusion shut down its consumer product (the Producer app) in February 2026 and is now an API-first developer offering. The pivot makes sense. The consumer market was already won by Suno and Udio. The API market for embedding music generation in third-party products was wide open.
The Riffusion API is the right pick if you're building music generation into your own product. SaaS apps that need background music, video editors that want generated soundtracks, indie game studios that want adaptive scores, all use Riffusion via API.
The audio quality is competitive with Suno and Udio on most genres but the workflow assumes you're a developer building infrastructure. For end users producing music directly, you'd use Suno or Udio.
Pricing is per-generation API metering. The exact rates vary with usage commitment but typically land around fifty cents per minute of generated audio at moderate volume.
Three Tracks: Pop Vocal, Cinematic Bed, Electronic Loop
The test was three tracks across both Suno and Udio. A two-minute pop song with vocals, a thirty-second cinematic bed for video use, and a sixty-second electronic loop for a game soundtrack.
On the pop vocal, Suno won decisively. The vocal performance had personality, the chord progressions felt fresh, and the overall production was ready to ship. Udio's version was competent but the vocals felt more synthesized.
On the cinematic bed, Udio won. The mix was wider, the strings sounded more like actual orchestral samples, and the dynamics built naturally over the thirty seconds. Suno's version was good but felt flatter and more compressed.
On the electronic loop, the comparison was closer. Both produced usable tracks. Udio's had slightly tighter sub-bass response and cleaner separation. Suno's was faster to iterate on (six versions in the time Udio produced two) and the variations across iterations were broader.
Producer Blind Panel: Which Output They Reached For
We took the generated tracks (anonymized) to three working music producers for blind ranking. The producers rated each track on usability for a real project (a YouTube video soundtrack, an album cut, a game scene), not subjective preference.
The pop vocal ranking was Suno first on all three producers. The producer feedback emphasized vocal naturalism and emotional delivery.
The cinematic bed ranking was Udio first on all three. Producer feedback emphasized mix quality and dynamic range. One producer noted Udio's track "sounds like it came from a real composer's session, not a generator."
The electronic loop was split. Two producers picked Udio for sound quality. One picked Suno for the wider variation across iterations. The honest answer is that for game audio you'd probably want Suno's iteration speed plus Udio's polish on the final pass.
The pattern matches the marketing pages but the size of the gap surprised the panel. On the right brief, both tools are usable. On the wrong brief, neither feels right.
Stems And DAW Workflow Per Platform
Stems are where the producer workflow lives or dies. Both Suno and Udio offer stem separation now (vocals, drums, bass, other), which makes the output genuinely usable in a traditional DAW workflow.
Suno's stems come through Suno Studio inside the platform. You can pull individual stems out as separate WAV files for use in Logic, Ableton, or Pro Tools. The stem quality is good, with cleaner separation than third-party tools like LALAL.AI.
Udio's stem export is similar in quality, with stems available as separate files. The Udio inpainting tool also lets you regenerate specific stems independently, which is unique in the category.
For producers who plan to ship AI-generated music as part of a larger production, both platforms now fit cleanly into DAW workflows. The era of "AI music is unusable in real productions" is over.
Commercial Licensing And The Free-Tier Trap
Both Suno and Udio offer commercial licensing on paid tiers. The free tiers explicitly do not include commercial rights, which is the trap most casual users fall into.
Suno's commercial rights kick in at the Pro tier (ten dollars per month). The Premier tier (thirty per month) includes higher generation limits and faster turnaround. For working musicians the Premier tier is the right pick.
Udio's commercial rights also start at the Pro tier (ten dollars per month) with the Premier tier at thirty per month for serious users.
The licensing terms include the right to monetize generated tracks on streaming platforms, use them in commercial videos, sell them as part of beats or sample packs, and integrate them into commercial products. The terms are genuinely permissive at the paid tiers.
Pricing At Hobby, Pro, And Studio Volumes
Hobby use (a few tracks a week, no commercial deployment) fits in the free tiers comfortably. Suno's free tier offers around fifty credits per day (about ten tracks). Udio's free tier is similar.
Working musician volume (commercial use, regular production) fits in the Pro tier at ten dollars per month per platform. Most working musicians end up subscribing to both to cover the vocal-versus-instrumental gap.
Studio volume (professional production, dozens of tracks per week) fits in the Premier tier at thirty dollars per month per platform. For a small production studio the combined sixty-dollar monthly cost is trivial compared to traditional sample library or session musician costs.
Related Reading
For more on AI media tools, see our voice cloning comparison, the AI video generation guide, and the image generator comparison. For broader AI workflow context see the indie hacker AI stack.
FAQ
Can I make money on Spotify with AI-generated music?
Yes, with caveats. Both Suno and Udio's Pro tier licenses include streaming rights. Spotify and other streaming platforms accept AI-generated content as long as you own the rights (which the Pro tier licenses provide). Some platforms have started flagging AI-generated content but you're not banned from monetization.
What happened to Riffusion's consumer app?
Shut down February 2026. The Producer app couldn't compete with Suno and Udio on consumer experience. The company pivoted to API-only and is doing fine in that niche but you can't use Riffusion for direct music creation anymore.
How does AI music quality compare to royalty-free libraries?
Suno and Udio at their best produce tracks that are competitive with paid royalty-free libraries like Artlist or Epidemic Sound. The advantage is unlimited iteration and complete customization. The disadvantage is occasional generation failures that royalty-free libraries don't have.
What about copyright and training data?
Both Suno and Udio faced lawsuits from major labels in 2024 over training data. The cases are ongoing as of 2026. The platforms claim their training is fair use. The legal outcome is still uncertain. The practical risk for end users is low but not zero.
Can AI music match a specific artist's style?
The platforms intentionally block direct artist style prompts (you can't ask for "a Taylor Swift song"). Genre prompts and style descriptors work fine. The line between "genre-similar" and "artist-clone" is fuzzy and the platforms are conservative about it.
Is there a tool for orchestral or classical work specifically?
AIVA is the specialist in this niche. The output quality is good for film scoring and orchestral pieces but the workflow is more limited than Suno or Udio. For pure classical work, AIVA is a reasonable pick. For broader range, Udio handles orchestral pieces well within its general toolset.
How long does Suno take per track?
Roughly thirty seconds for a two-minute track on Suno V5. Udio takes ninety-plus seconds for similar length. The Suno speed makes iteration much faster for songwriter-driven workflows.
What about lyrics quality?
Suno's built-in lyric generation is good for casual use but produces generic results for serious songwriting. The better workflow is writing lyrics yourself (or with Claude or ChatGPT) and feeding them to Suno for the musical performance. The Suno vocal performance on human-written lyrics is the strongest use case for the tool.