Style prompt
Use genre, mood, BPM, vocal, instrumentation, era, and production style for the main Suno style field.
Suno AI music prompt generator
Create a more complete Suno prompt with style, lyrics direction, structure, production style, negative prompt, and platform-ready output formats.
A useful Suno AI music prompt combines genre, mood, BPM, vocal direction, instruments, production style, song structure, use case, and a short avoid list. Keep lyrics separate when you need to revise the sound without rewriting the words.
Suno-specific controls
Use genre, mood, BPM, vocal, instrumentation, era, and production style for the main Suno style field.
Generate a hook or section starter with verse, chorus, bridge, and outro labels.
Add avoid rules for distorted vocals, muddy mixes, long intros, spoken word, and unwanted references.
Copy-ready library
Bright modern pop, uplifting and catchy, female vocal, punchy drums, warm synth bass, handclaps, short intro, big chorus, radio-ready mix, 105 BPM, made for a TikTok hook.
Dark melodic rap, rap vocal, tight 808, crisp hats, minor piano loop, confident hook, verse into chorus, clean mix, 92 BPM, no distorted vocal effects.
Calm lo-fi instrumental, dusty keys, soft vinyl texture, brushed drums, warm bass, relaxed loop structure, 78 BPM, cozy late-night study mood, avoid busy melodies.
Epic EDM game music, driving synth arps, wide supersaw chords, heavy kick, riser into drop, heroic mood, 128 BPM, cinematic club mix, instrumental.
Cinematic trailer cue, orchestra and hybrid synths, choir swell, huge percussion, tense intro, rising bridge, explosive final chorus, 90 BPM, no spoken word.
Nostalgic modern country, warm male vocal, acoustic guitar, pedal steel, steady drums, verse chorus bridge chorus, heartfelt small-town imagery, 86 BPM.
Aggressive modern rock, gritty male vocal, palm-muted guitars, live drums, bass drive, short intro, anthem chorus, 150 BPM, punchy mix, avoid muddy low end.
Dreamy ambient instrumental, soft pads, distant piano, airy textures, slow evolving structure, 60 BPM feel, peaceful meditation bed, no drums, no vocal.
Romantic modern R&B, smooth duet vocals, electric piano, subtle guitar, deep bass, laid-back drums, intimate verse, memorable chorus, 72 BPM.
Uplifting future house, female vocal chops, piano chords, sidechain bass, bright plucks, tight build, quick drop, clean club mix, 124 BPM, made for a YouTube intro.
Calm cafe jazz instrumental, upright bass, brushed drums, soft piano, warm saxophone fills, relaxed swing groove, 88 BPM, low-distraction study background.
Dark cinematic trailer music, low choir, taiko drums, bowed strings, distorted pulses, slow tension build, huge final hit, 76 BPM, avoid spoken word and muddy percussion.
A good Suno prompt should describe the sound without making the model guess the whole arrangement. Start with a clear genre and mood, then add tempo, vocal type, instrumentation, production style, and structure. If you need lyrics, keep them in a separate section with labels such as [Verse], [Chorus], and [Bridge].
This page is intentionally Suno-specific. The output includes a compact Suno style format, a more detailed prompt, a lyrics starter, and a negative prompt. That split helps when you want to test one idea several ways without rewriting the whole brief.
The most common mistake is writing only a mood and genre, such as "sad pop song". That gives too little control. Another mistake is combining lyrics, structure, and style in one messy paragraph. Suno can still produce a track, but iteration becomes harder because you cannot tell which part of the prompt caused the result.
Use the Suno prompt guide for the full workflow, browse Suno prompt examples if you want a starting point by genre, or open the Suno V5 Prompt Generator when you need version-aware beat, vocal, instrument, and mood controls.
Usually no. Keep the style prompt focused on sound, arrangement, and production. Put lyrics or section labels in a separate lyrics area so you can revise the song words without accidentally changing the genre, mood, or mix direction.
Use a short avoid list for the first pass. Three to six items is usually enough: distorted vocals, muddy mix, long intro, spoken word, unwanted noise, or copyrighted artist names. A very long avoid list can make the prompt harder to reason about.
Make the structure more explicit and reduce competing instructions. Try a simple sequence such as intro, verse, chorus, bridge, final chorus, outro. If you need a short hook, say that the chorus should arrive quickly and that the intro should be brief.
"Dreamy synth pop, female vocal, 105 BPM, bright pads, warm bass, crisp drums, short intro, verse, chorus, bridge, final chorus, clean radio mix, made for a travel reel. Avoid muddy bass, long intro, distorted vocals, and artist-name imitation." This prompt works because each phrase has a job: style, vocal, tempo, instruments, structure, use case, and avoid rules.