
Do you have the rights to your suno songs?
Suno currently offers three membership levels, and the main differences come down to credits, commercial rights, and access to advanced tools.
The Free Plan costs nothing. You receive around 50 credits per day, which refresh daily. That’s usually enough for roughly 10 song generations per day depending on how you use your credits. You get access to the basic music generation models and can download and share what you create. However, this tier is strictly for personal, non-commercial use. You cannot legally sell or monetize tracks created under the free plan.
The Pro Plan costs about $10 per month, or around $8 per month if billed yearly. This plan provides approximately 2,500 credits per month, which translates to hundreds of song generations depending on your workflow. Most importantly, the Pro Plan grants commercial use rights for songs created while you are actively subscribed. That means you can distribute your music to streaming platforms, sell downloads, use tracks in monetized videos, or include them in commercial projects. You also get priority generation speed, access to the latest AI model, stem splitting and editing features, higher audio upload limits, and the option to purchase additional credits if needed.
The Premier Plan costs about $30 per month, or roughly $24 per month if billed yearly. It includes everything in the Pro Plan but increases your monthly credits to around 10,000, allowing for very high-volume production. Premier also includes full access to Suno Studio, which is a more advanced, multitrack environment where you can arrange stems on a timeline, edit more deeply, and build tracks in a more traditional studio-style workflow. It offers the highest generation priority and early access to new major features.
One important licensing detail: commercial rights apply only to songs generated while you are subscribed to a paid plan. Tracks created under the free plan do not automatically become commercially licensed if you upgrade later; they would need to be regenerated while on Pro or Premier to receive commercial rights.
For most serious creators who want to monetize their work but don’t need massive output volume, the Pro Plan is usually the practical sweet spot.
Bottom line, you can sell your music with either the Pro or Premium — the Premium just gives you more tools, which I either already use on other platforms, or don’t use at all — so I only need the Pro for what I’m doing, and that’s probably best for you, too, would be my best guess.
===========================================================================
Hooray, here’s the Bardo bus! Hop on board quick, while you have the chance!
===========================================================================
See You At The Top!!!
gorby

