Level Up Your Tracks: 10 Pro Tips for Making Better Songs on Suno AI (2026 Edition)

July 8, 2026 - Suno Tips
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If you’ve spent any time on Suno AI, you know the feeling: you type in a quick prompt, hit generate, and hope for a masterpiece. Sometimes you get lucky, but more often than not, you end up with something that sounds a bit generic, formulaic, or cut off right at the good part.

Suno has become incredibly powerful, but getting professional-tier results requires learning how to “speak” to the AI like a music producer rather than just typing into a search bar. Here are 10 pro tips to instantly elevate your Suno tracks and make them sound like they were recorded in a real studio.

1. Ditch “Simple Mode” and Always Use Custom Mode

Simple Mode is great for your first five minutes on the platform, but it severely limits your control. By switching to Custom Mode, you gain separate boxes for your lyrics, song structure, and musical style. This is the single most important step to turning random AI dice rolls into intentional, cohesive tracks.

2. Trade Generic Genres for a Specific Era

Typing “rock” or “folk” gives Suno too many choices, so it averages decades of music into a beige, generic output. Instead, point the engine toward a specific era and geographic vibe to lock in production aesthetics.

  • Instead of “Folk”: Try 1971 Laurel Canyon folk, warm tape saturation
  • Instead of “Hip-Hop”: Try Late-90s Memphis rap, gritty lo-fi bass
  • Instead of “Rock”: Try Early-80s Mancunian post-punk

3. Build a Multi-Layered Style Prompt

The most professional-sounding tracks rely on a formula known as the GMIV framework. Don’t just list one genre — stack your style prompt in this exact order:

  1. Genre/Era: Modern synthwave, 80s retro
  2. Mood/Emotion: Nostalgic, melancholic, nocturnal
  3. Instrumentation: Analog synths, gated snare, pulsing bassline
  4. Vocal Profile: Breathy female vocals, layered harmonies

4. Inject Performance Tags Directly Into the Lyrics Box

Many users don’t realize that Suno reads stylistic directions inside the lyrics box. You can tell the AI how to sing specific lines by using brackets.

  • [soft falsetto, almost whispered] before an intimate verse
  • [vocal belts, high energy] right as the chorus hits
  • [add low harmony] on the final line of a section to build depth

5. Song Structure Tags Are Not Optional

Without explicit directions, Suno will often default to chaotic arrangements. Use bold structural bracket tags on their own lines in the lyric window to map out a proper radio-ready flow:

[Intro]
[Verse 1]
[Pre-Chorus]
[Chorus]
[Verse 2]
[Bridge]
[Outro]

6. Command Instrument Solos and Breaks

Want a ripping guitar solo or a moment for the beat to breathe? Don’t assume the AI will give you one. Use explicit instrumental brackets between your lyrical sections.

  • Try [Instrumental Break]
  • Try [Guitar solo: wide open chords, wah-wah pedal]
  • Try [Bass drop] or [Piano interlude]

7. Escape the Runtime Cutoff with “Continue”

If a generation stops right in the middle of an epic chorus or right before the bridge, don’t throw it away. Click the three dots next to the clip and select “Continue From This Song.” This lets you extend the track, maintaining the exact same vocal model, melody, and instrument arrangement to build out a seamless 3-to-4-minute piece.

8. Smash Genre Boundaries for Unique Hooks

Suno loves contrast. Some of the most viral and engaging AI tracks come from mixing completely incompatible styles. If your tracks are sounding stale, try blending genres that normally never cross paths, such as:

  • Country + EDM
  • Opera vocals over drill beats
  • Classical piano + heavy trap drums

9. Optimize Your Lyrics for “AI Singer” Phrasing

If the vocal generation sounds garbled, rushed, or full of weird AI gibberish, your text is likely too dense.

  • Keep your lines short (typically 5 to 10 words per line)
  • Use clear, natural punctuation to let the AI know where to “breathe”
  • Avoid incredibly complex rhyme schemes or Shakespearean vocabulary
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