Suno
Compact style prompts with genre, mood, tempo, vocal, instruments, structure, and avoid rules.
AI music prompt generator
A platform-flexible music prompt builder for Suno, Udio, and general AI song tools. Switch output tabs for each platform without rewriting the idea from scratch.
Platform outputs
Compact style prompts with genre, mood, tempo, vocal, instruments, structure, and avoid rules.
Era-inspired song prompts emphasizing vocal tone, instrumentation, mix style, and arrangement shape.
Detailed prompts that work as a brief for music tools, composers, or prompt packs.
Use this page when the target platform is not fixed yet. A creator may start with a song idea, then test it in Suno, Udio, or another AI music tool. The generator keeps the core idea stable while changing the wording for each platform, which makes A/B testing easier.
The strongest prompts usually include a musical lane, a vocal or instrumental choice, the instruments that should lead, a tempo range, the arrangement shape, and a short avoid list.
A useful formula is: genre + mood + tempo + vocal + instrumentation + structure + production style + use case + avoid rules. That order gives the model a clear hierarchy. The genre and mood set the musical expectation, while structure and production style make the result less vague.
If the output feels generic, add one concrete use case such as podcast intro, game BGM, trailer cue, meditation loop, TikTok hook, or full song demo.
Suno prompts tend to work well when the style field is compact and the lyrics or section labels are kept separate. Udio prompts often benefit from era, mix style, vocal tone, and arrangement language. The same idea can produce different results when the platform wording changes.
For that reason, this page includes platform-specific output tabs instead of a single universal text block.
Use the Suno AI Music Prompt Generator for Suno-specific prompts, the Suno V5 Prompt Generator for version-aware V5/V5.5 prompts, the Udio Prompt Generator for Udio wording, and the Suno Prompts library when you want examples before writing your own prompt.
For prompt writing rules, start with How to Prompt Suno.
A useful prompt is detailed enough to remove ambiguity, but not so long that every phrase competes for attention. For most music tools, one clear sentence plus a short avoid list is enough for a first test. Add more detail only when you need a specific structure, vocal type, instrument palette, or production style.
It is safer and more flexible to describe musical traits instead of naming artists. Use terms such as warm analog synths, intimate male vocal, bright pop chorus, dusty lo-fi drums, cinematic percussion, or clean radio mix. This keeps the prompt focused on sound design instead of imitation.
Change one layer at a time. If the track has the wrong energy, edit mood, BPM, and drums. If it has the wrong arrangement, edit intro, verse, chorus, bridge, drop, and outro. If the mix feels bad, add production and avoid rules such as clean vocal, less reverb, no muddy bass, or shorter intro.