You need a soundtrack for a short video, a podcast intro, or a looping bed for an app. A traditional composer may be out of budget, and the stock library may feel too generic.
This guide takes a decision-first approach: where AI music fits, how to choose tools safely, and what to check around rights, disclosures, and deliverables before you publish.
Where AI music fits today
AI music sits between two familiar options: faster than commissioning a composer and more tailored than choosing a stock track.
It works well for short-form social clips, ad cutdowns, podcast stingers, and looping game beds where speed, budget, and basic customization matter more than a signature composition.
How generators work in practice
Most tools follow a similar path: write a prompt, set genre, mood, tempo, and length, then choose vocals or instrumental and generate a few takes.
For example, getimg.ai’s music tool states that you can set genre, mood, tempo, and length, use presets of 30 seconds, 1 minute, 2 minutes, and 3 minutes, and generate multiple variations. Its FAQ says getimg.ai uses Google Lyria 3 Pro and downloads as a .mpeg file.
Always read current license terms, since rights, export rules, and allowed use cases differ and can change.
A simple decision framework
Before generating anything, weigh five factors.
- Speed: AI and stock both beat commissioning when you need a track today.
- Brand uniqueness: A custom composer still wins for a signature theme.
- Budget: AI and stock fit tight budgets; a composer is a larger investment.
- Rights complexity: Confirm distribution, monetization, and client delivery in the tool’s terms.
- Revisions: AI regenerates quickly; a composer offers directed, human revisions.
Factor in disclosure too. For realistic or meaningfully altered content, YouTube requires creators to disclose AI use, and a label appears on the video.
Tool landscape: quick picks by use case
Use the options below as neutral starting points, then confirm current vendor terms.
Suno focuses on full songs, advertises 10 free songs per day, and states that paid subscribers receive commercial rights.
Stable Audio suits variable-length tracks. Stable Audio 3.0 is trained on fully licensed data, and users own outputs under the Community License.
Mubert leans toward sync use for videos, podcasts, apps, and games, while restricting streaming-platform distribution and Content ID registration.
AIVA targets composition. Its Pro plan states that users own copyright and can monetize without restrictions.
Udio uses credits and lets you bring your own audio. Its help center reminds users they must have rights to anything they upload.
For teams that want text-to-music inside the same workspace they already use for images, video, and voice, getimg.ai is one option. Its Getimg’s AI Music Generator lets you set genre, mood, tempo, and length, then choose vocals or instrumentals to match your cut. Review its terms before any commercial deliverable.
A publish-safe checklist for brands and creators
- Read the tool’s current license page and confirm your use case is allowed.
- Avoid uploading audio you do not own, since tools like Udio require those rights.
- Export needed deliverables, such as full tracks, loopable beds, and any stems the tool provides.
- Label AI use where required, including on YouTube, and respect platform rules such as Spotify’s anti-impersonation policy.
- Archive prompts, plan tier, and license proof in case you need to verify usage later.
Copyright status is also worth understanding: AI-assisted human works may be eligible for protection, but purely AI-generated material is not copyrightable, case by case.
A simple workflow
Use this repeatable sequence for most projects.
- Write a short brief covering mood, genre, length, and placement.
- Prompt the tool and set your controls.
- Choose vocals or instrumental based on the cut.
- Generate two to four takes and compare them against the brief.
- Edit or extend the strongest option, then export the needed formats.
- Add captions and AI use labels where required, then deliver.
Thinking about music early keeps your kit consistent. If you are planning gear and software for the long term, this guide to a future ready production setup pairs well with a music workflow. For broader comparisons, AI song tools can help you shortlist tools before a brief.
Frequently asked questions
Can I monetize AI music on YouTube?
Yes, if your tool’s terms allow commercial use. YouTube also requires disclosure for AI-generated or meaningfully altered realistic content.
Do I need to label AI music?
Often yes. Check each platform. EU transparency obligations under the AI Act apply from August 2, 2026, including labelling for deepfakes.
The pragmatic takeaway
AI music can speed up production when it fits the brief and the license. Decide where it beats stock or a composer, then publish with clear rights, the right files, and any required disclosures.
