AI Audio

Suno vs Udio

Head-to-head with the fewertools Best Score formula (70% category fit + 30% Stack Score). Independent. No paid placements.

Suno 84 · Udio 82 · Suno leads by 2
84/100
Recommended
Best Score84
Category fit87
Stack Score78
VerdictRecommended
PricingFreemium
Best for Type a prompt, get a full song.
Not ideal for Production music for commercial release (licensing varies).
vs
82/100
Recommended
Best Score82
Category fit84
Stack Score77
VerdictRecommended
PricingFreemium
Best for Suno's rival.
Not ideal for Suno is already cheaper or fits your needs.
My honest take

My honest take: this is a tie I find genuinely useful, not annoying. Suno and Udio score within 2 points because they earn their marks differently. I'd pick Suno when type a prompt, get a full song is the priority, and Udio when suno's rival matters more. If you're already on one of them and it's working, don't switch.

Winner by category

Different jobs, different winners.

Best for bigger teams
Suno
Best for beginners
Suno
Best long-term bet
Suno
Best overall score
Suno
The long answer

Why Suno edges it.

Suno is type a prompt, get a full song. Udio is suno's rival. Both target ai audio workflows, and the question we get most often is which one to commit to. Here is the honest answer based on our scoring across functionality, pricing value, ease of use, reliability, and founder fit.

By the numbers, this is effectively a tie. Suno scores 84 and Udio scores 82, within 2 points. A tie on the headline doesn't mean the choice doesn't matter though. Both tools earn similar overall marks for different reasons, and the right pick depends entirely on which set of strengths matches the job in front of you.

The two tools are close across every criterion we score. There is no single factor where one pulls more than a point or two ahead of the other. That's why the headline score is tight and the real question is fit.

Side-by-side

How they compare on every factor we score.

Best Score is the headline number (70% category fit + 30% Stack Score). The five criteria below feed Category Fit. Stack Score reflects editorial verdict, ownership stability, and pricing trajectory.

SunoUdioWinner
Best Score84/10082/100Suno
Category Fit87/10084/100Suno
Stack Score78/10077/100Suno
VerdictRecommendedRecommendedN/A
Pricing modelFreemiumFreemiumN/A
OwnershipUnknownUnknownN/A
CategoryAI AudioAI AudioN/A
Functionality9/109/10Tie
Pricing value8/108/10Tie
Ease of use10/109/10Suno
Reliability8/107/10Suno
Founder fit8/108/10Tie
When each tool wins

Pick by situation, not by score alone.

Pick Suno if...

  • type a prompt, get a full song
  • suno is already cheaper or fits your needs

Pick Udio if...

  • suno's rival
  • production music for commercial release (licensing varies)
FAQ

Suno vs Udio: the common questions.

Which is better for solo founders?

Both score similarly on founder fit. Pick based on which best-for line matches your current job.

Which is cheaper at the founder tier?

Suno pricing model: Freemium. Udio pricing model: Freemium. They land in similar pricing-value territory.

Is the ownership situation a risk for either tool?

Suno has standard ownership signals. Udio has standard ownership signals.

What's the migration cost if I'm already on the other one?

Migration cost depends on how deep you've integrated this category into your stack. For a project that uses Suno or Udio as the primary surface (not just a small embedded feature), expect a half-day to a weekend of migration work plus a week of running both in parallel. Both tools support data export. Run a fresh audit on your current stack before deciding the switch is worth it: audit my stack with both options.

How is this scoring decided?

Best Score is 70% Category Fit (graded on functionality, pricing value, ease of use, reliability, founder fit, scored 0-10 each) plus 30% Stack Score (editorial verdict + ownership stability + pricing trajectory). Same formula on every tool, no paid placements. Read the full methodology.

Score anatomy

Why Suno scored 84, and Udio scored 82.

Best Score isn't pulled out of the air. Here's what lifted each tool and what pulled it down, criterion by criterion.

Suno · 84/100

Strong because
  • functionality (9/10)
  • pricing value (8/10)
  • ease of use (10/10)
  • reliability (8/10)
  • founder fit (8/10)

Udio · 82/100

Strong because
  • functionality (9/10)
  • pricing value (8/10)
  • ease of use (9/10)
  • founder fit (8/10)
  • genuine free tier
Real-world scenarios

Which one wins in your specific situation.

  1. You already use Suno and it's working: don't migrate. The score gap (2 points) doesn't justify the disruption. Migration costs are real · half a day to a weekend of work plus a week running both in parallel.
Stack fit

How each fits inside a founder stack.

A tool you can't integrate is a tool you'll replace in six months. Here's how each plays with the rest.

Suno

Suno fits cleanly in a stack with Descript, Suno, Riverside, Substack. If your stack already includes most of those, Suno integrates without friction.

Udio

Udio fits the same kind of stack. If your existing stack leans toward Descript or Suno or Riverside, Udio doesn't create integration debt either.

Final recommendation

For most founders, Suno. The gap is small enough that the other tool is still a respectable second choice if your situation calls for it. If you're already on Udio and it's working, don't migrate. The cost of switching is real and the gain is small.

Clinton Feyisitan
Reviewed by Clinton Feyisitan
Founder of fewertools. Built and migrated 17 founder stacks. Independent reviewer.

Every comparison on fewertools uses the same Best Score formula and the same five review criteria. No paid placements. No vendor surveys. If the verdict here is wrong, tell me why and I'll re-score with your evidence.

Bottom line

Suno for most founders.

Effectively a tie. Suno (84) and Udio (82) score within 2 points. Pick based on which best-for fits your situation: Suno for type a prompt, get a full song, Udio for suno's rival.

Not sure either is right for your stack?

Paste the tools you already use. fewertools audits the whole stack: where there's overlap, where the weak links are, and which of these two (if either) actually belongs in your build.