What Suno’s official policy says
If you use the free (Basic) version of Suno: Suno retains ownership of the songs you generate, and they grant you only a non-commercial license (e.g. you can listen to or share the music, but not monetize it).
If you use a paid plan (Pro or Premier) when creating the song: you are considered the owner, and you are granted a commercial use license — meaning you can distribute or monetize the music, even if you cancel the subscription later.
What that means in practice
If you generated a song using Suno while on a paid subscription, then you own the song (at least under Suno’s licensing terms), and can potentially monetize it.
If you used the free version or rely entirely on AI-generated music, then legally (or contractually) Suno owns it, and you’re only allowed non-commercial uses.
If you also contributed original lyrics, melody, etc. yourself — those parts are more defendably yours in terms of copyright/ownership.
What that means for you (user) in real life
If you used Suno on a paid plan, you can treat the master as “yours” under Suno’s licensing — you can distribute, monetize, or license it (as long as you comply with their ToS).
But “owning the master” doesn’t guarantee strong legal protection against someone else copying or releasing a similar track — because AI-generated works may not qualify for standard copyright in many jurisdictions.
If you want stronger protection, it’s safer to add a human-authored component (e.g. lyrics, your own recording, performance) so there’s a clearer “human authorship” involved.
If you were on the free plan, you don’t have commercial rights / master ownership — Suno does.
Stream/Download songs produced & distributed by Blakkwuman22 Music
https://blakkwuman22music.com/store/
