How much does Suno cost in 2026? Short answer: you can start for free, and paid plans land in the range of a couple of streaming subscriptions per month. The longer answer is more useful, because Suno does not sell you "songs" — it sells you credits, and the way those credits burn is where people get surprised. This guide breaks down the tiers, the fine print on commercial use, and where the real cost hides.
What changed in 2026
Suno's pricing shape has stayed familiar — a free tier plus two paid levels — but the details keep moving. In 2026, generations sound noticeably better and longer than the early versions, which means fewer wasted re-rolls but also more temptation to keep tweaking. Legal pressure from the music industry also reshaped the terms: commercial rights are now firmly gated behind paid plans, and the platform is more explicit about what you can and cannot monetize. Because the company adjusts credit allowances and prices periodically, treat every number here as directional and verify the current figures on Suno's own pricing page before you pay.
How Suno pricing actually works
The core thing to understand: you are billed in credits, not tracks. Each time you generate, Suno spends a fixed chunk of credits and usually returns two variations. If you re-roll a prompt ten times chasing the perfect chorus, that is roughly ten generations of credits gone — not one "song."
So the honest way to budget is not "how much does Suno cost per month" but "how many finished tracks do I actually complete, and how many attempts does each one take?" A hobbyist who accepts the second or third try will stretch a plan far further than a perfectionist who re-rolls twenty times per track.
The plans compared
Here is the rough 2026 structure. Confirm exact credit counts and prices before subscribing, since they shift.
| Plan |
Rough monthly cost |
Credits / generations |
Commercial use |
Best for |
| Free |
$0 |
Small daily allowance, resets each day |
No |
Testing the model, casual play |
| Pro |
Low double digits |
A few thousand credits/month |
Yes |
Creators posting regularly |
| Premier |
Mid double digits |
Several times the Pro allowance |
Yes |
Heavy users, small studios |
Annual billing typically shaves a meaningful chunk off the monthly rate on paid tiers, so if you already know you will use it for a year, that is the cheaper path. If you are unsure, pay monthly first.
Commercial rights and the fine print
This is the part most "how much does Suno cost" articles skip. On the free tier, tracks are for personal, non-commercial use — you cannot legally monetize them on streaming platforms, in ads, or in client work. Commercial rights come with the paid plans, and generally apply to songs you create while your subscription is active.
Watch two things. First, rights usually attach to the plan being active when you generate, so read how cancellation affects tracks you already made. Second, "you can use it commercially" is not the same as "this is guaranteed free of any copyright dispute" — the broader legal landscape around AI music is still contested. If your use is high-stakes (a paid ad campaign, a released album), get your own legal read rather than trusting a marketing bullet point.
Where the real cost hides
- Re-roll temptation. The single biggest credit drain is chasing perfection. Set a limit per track.
- The upgrade reflex. People buy Premier expecting to need it, then use a fraction of the credits. Start on Pro and upgrade only when you actually hit the ceiling.
- Add-on credit packs. Running dry mid-month and buying top-ups can quietly cost more than the next tier up. If you top up often, just upgrade.
- Annual lock-in. The discount is real, but only if you keep using it. Do not prepay a year for a tool you might abandon in six weeks.
Is it worth it?
For hobbyists and content creators who need background music, jingles, or demos, a paid Suno plan is cheap relative to hiring a musician or licensing stock tracks. For anyone releasing music seriously, the cost is trivial next to the legal and quality questions you should weigh first. The tool is inexpensive; your judgment about the output is where the stakes live.
FAQ
Is Suno free to use?
Yes, there is a free tier with a daily credit allowance, but the output is non-commercial and the caps are tight. It is best for testing, not production.
How much does Suno cost per month for commercial use?
Commercial rights start on the paid Pro tier, which sits in the low double digits per month. Premier costs more and grants a larger credit allowance for heavier users.
Do unused credits roll over?
Generally paid-plan credits are monthly-use-it-or-lose-it rather than accumulating forever, so verify the current rollover policy before assuming you can bank them.
Can I sell songs I make on the free plan?
No. Monetizing tracks requires an active paid plan, and even then the broader AI-music legal picture is unsettled for high-stakes commercial use.
Where to go next
If you are weighing AI tools more broadly, it helps to understand how the underlying systems differ. Read our breakdown of AI agents vs RAG for the architecture basics, see how autonomous tools browse the web in AI browser agents, and if you want to build something yourself, start with our AI agents tutorial.