Suno Prompts

Browse, copy, and adapt structured Suno prompts by genre, mood, vocal style, BPM, platform, and creator use case.

Prompt Library

Browse Suno prompts by genre, mood, vocal, BPM, use case, and platform. Copy examples for pop, rap, lo-fi, EDM, cinematic, country, rock, ambient, and R&B.

GenreMoodUse casePrompt
lo-ficalmstudy BGMCalm lo-fi instrumental, dusty keys, soft vinyl texture, brushed drums, warm bass, relaxed loop structure, 78 BPM.
EDMepicgame BGMEpic EDM game music, driving synth arps, wide supersaw chords, heavy kick, riser into drop, 128 BPM.
cinematicepictrailerCinematic trailer cue, orchestra and hybrid synths, huge percussion, tense intro, rising bridge, explosive final chorus.

How to use this Suno prompt library

The library is for browsing prompt patterns before you write a custom prompt. Start by choosing the closest genre and mood, then check whether the example includes the vocal type, instruments, tempo, structure, and use case you need. A good example should be easy to adapt without changing every word.

Do not treat examples as fixed templates. A prompt for a TikTok hook needs a short intro and memorable chorus language. A prompt for game background music needs clearer loop, energy, and instrumentation rules. A prompt for meditation or study music should usually reduce vocal and drum complexity.

Library fields that matter

  • Genre: sets the broad musical lane, such as pop, rap, lo-fi, EDM, cinematic, country, rock, ambient, or R&B.
  • Mood: changes harmony, rhythm, energy, and vocal delivery.
  • Use case: explains why the track exists, which often changes the arrangement length.
  • Platform: helps you adapt wording for Suno, Udio, or a general AI music brief.

From browsing to generating

After you find a useful example, open the Suno Prompt Generator and rebuild it with your own inputs. Use the Suno prompt guide when you need to split style, lyrics, structure, and avoid rules more carefully.

Suno prompt library FAQ

Why browse prompts instead of generating immediately?

Browsing helps you learn the shape of a good prompt before you customize one. You can see how genre, mood, vocal, BPM, structure, and use case fit together, then reuse the pattern for your own track.

How should I compare two prompts?

Keep most variables the same and change only one dimension, such as mood or instrumentation. Comparing a calm lo-fi prompt against an epic EDM prompt does not teach much because every part changed at once.

What should I copy from an example?

Copy the structure, not necessarily every word. The best reusable parts are the order of details, the use of specific instruments, the mention of arrangement, and the avoid rules. Replace the concept, use case, and mood so the final prompt fits your song.

Library check: a prompt example earns its place when it teaches a reusable pattern. If an example only says "make a good song", it is too vague. If it shows genre, mood, vocal, instruments, structure, tempo, and avoid rules, it can become a reliable starting point for new tracks.

When expanding the library, add pages or examples around real search intents: pop hook prompts, lo-fi study prompts, cinematic trailer prompts, game BGM prompts, and Udio prompt variants.