ElevenMusic is a free iOS app from ElevenLabs that lets anyone generate songs using text prompts — no musical training needed. Released on April 1, 2026, it puts a royalty-free AI music studio on your phone, complete with a built-in discovery feed, mood-based playlists, and a remix system. The community’s first take: impressive audio quality, thin controls, and a credit burn rate that gives hobbyists pause
The creative landscape for music production will definitely change overnight with the launch of ElevenMusic. Anyone can generate complete, high-fidelity songs using only natural language prompts. ElevenLabs is different from existing competitors. Many of them have faced legal scrutiny over training data. ElevenLabs is positioning its free AI music app as a legally compliant, creator-first platform.
It stands out in the market by using 100% licensed training data from partners like Merlin and Kobalt. It offers a “publish and earn” model where creators can monetize their AI-assisted tracks.
Check out the app here: ElevenMusic on iOS
3 key takeaways
- ElevenMusic is free to download and gives you seven AI-generated songs per day — no credit card required. The Pro plan ($9.99/month) unlocks 500 tracks monthly with 500GB+ storage.
- The app is more than a generator. It’s built like a streaming platform, with charts, live stations, trending tracks, and a remix feed — making it closer to “Spotify meets Suno” than a bare-bones text-to-music tool.
- ElevenLabs’ biggest differentiator isn’t sound quality (Suno and Udio still lead there). It’s licensing. The music model was trained on licensed data from day one — which matters significantly for creators who monetize content.
What is ElevenMusic, and why did ElevenLabs build it?

ElevenMusic is ElevenLabs’ standalone iOS app for AI music generation. Type a prompt describing a genre, mood, and feel — the app produces a complete track in seconds. You can specify song length, whether it has lyrics, and writing style.
ElevenLabs wants to be more than just a voice model company, and sees tools that use AI to create music and other mediums as a way to grow and protect itself from the eventual commoditization of AI audio models. In other words, this isn’t a side feature — it’s a strategic pivot.
The app had been sitting in the App Store for several weeks before its April 1 release, quietly building a library of community-generated tracks. ElevenLabs already had 14 million community-generated songs before the app even launched. That’s not a cold start — it’s a content head start.
In March 2026, the company also launched a Music Marketplace that allows for the publication, licensing, and monetization of tracks generated on the platform. ElevenMusic is the consumer front end of a larger audio ecosystem: generation, editing, marketplace, and now discovery — all connected.
“Whether you are a Grammy nominee or making music in your bedroom, you now have access to a global ecosystem where your work can be discovered and monetized instantly,” says producer Patrick Jordan-Patrikios.
How does the ElevenMusic AI music generator actually work?
Think of it as text-to-music AI: you describe what you want, the model interprets it, and a track comes out the other side. No DAW, no stems, no music theory required.
Users can describe genre, mood, instruments, even vocal style. The app also handles remixes, letting you feed it an existing song and describe how you want it changed.
That last part is worth noting. ElevenMusic isn’t just a free song maker — it’s a remix layer on top of an existing community. Other users’ tracks show up in a discovery feed, and you can take any of them and prompt a variation. Those remixes count toward your daily seven-song limit on the free tier.
The app’s structure mirrors a streaming service: ElevenMusic includes live stations, pre-created albums, and daily mixes categorized by moods such as Focus, Energy, Relax, Late Night, Cosmic, and Chill, along with sections for top charts, trending music, and new releases.
For power users, the Pro tier at $9.99 per month or $95.90 per year enables users to create up to 500 tracks every month, gives storage space of over 500 GB, and provides access to all kinds of styles and moods.
Advanced Editing Tools
ElevenMusic offers more than just “one-shot” generation. It features:
- Sectional Editing: If you love a song but hate the chorus, you can “in-paint” or regenerate just that section without changing the rest of the track.
- Stem Separation: Pro users can separate a song into individual tracks—drums, bass, and vocals—to use in professional music software (DAWs).
- Music Finetunes: This allows brands to upload their own audio files to train a custom version of the model that always sounds like their unique brand identity.
Under the Hood: Hierarchical Modeling and Precise Control
To the average user, the app works like magic.
You type “Upbeat synthwave with nostalgic 80s energy,” and a song appears. However, technical experts explain that the model uses a “hierarchical sequence-to-sequence” architecture.
Think of this as a two-layer system. The first layer handles the “big picture”—the overall structure of the song and its genre. The second layer focuses on the “micro-details,” like the exact notes and the breathiness of the vocals. This prevents the song from sounding like random noise and ensures it stays in the correct key and tempo from start to finish.
Learn more: Whole-Song Hierarchical Generation of Symbolic Music Using Cascaded Diffusion Models
How does ElevenMusic compare to Suno and Udio?
The AI music generation space now has three serious players. Each targets a different kind of creator.
Suno is built for speed and accessibility. Type a prompt, get a full song with vocals and lyrics in under a minute. Suno is the most popular AI music generator by far — fast, intuitive, and producing complete songs from a simple text prompt. It’s the go-to for content creators who need volume.

Udio plays for audio quality and control. Udio is the audiophile pick — raw audio quality is consistently strong, and the interface is built for people who want granular control over the output. It’s the professional’s choice, though its recent download restrictions frustrated part of the community.

ElevenMusic takes a third angle entirely. ElevenLabs’ pitch is different: not “we sound the best” but “we are the safest choice for commercial use.” The company developed its music model using licensed training data, avoiding the copyright issues that plagued Suno and Udio.
Where ElevenMusic currently lags:
ElevenLabs is still relatively new and does not yet offer the editing and post-production tools that Suno Studio or Udio’s inpainting provide. The instrumental backing is competent but not as varied or genre-flexible as the top two platforms.
ElevenMusic vs Udio vs Suno Compared
| Feature | ElevenMusic | Suno v5 | Udio v4 |
| Primary Strength | Legal/Commercial Safety | Catchy Pop Melodies | Complex Orchestral Depth |
| Audio Quality | 44.1kHz (Studio Grade) | 44.1kHz | 44.1kHz |
| Best Use Case | Commercial/Marketing | Social Media/Vlogs | Professional Producers |
| Monetization | Direct Marketplace | Limited | Limited |
The practical takeaway from experienced creators: use Suno or Udio for personal or high-quality vocal work, and use ElevenMusic for anything commercial or client-facing where copyright clarity matters.
What the community is actually saying about ElevenMusic
I have collected some early reviews for the ElevenMusic app:
ElevenMusic Reddit Reviews: “Quality is fantastic, but it burns through credits like no other”
The AI music community on Reddit noticed ElevenLabs’ entry almost immediately. Users acknowledged the quality is high, but the “barrier to entry” became a frequent topic of discussion and criticism.
Let’s look into some discussions I found:
ElevenMusic Reddit Reviews: Voice cloning and workflow restrictions

A thread on r/udioMusic surfaced one of ElevenMusic’s most discussed friction points — voice cloning restrictions. The platform only lets you use a voice you can verify as your own, which blocks creators who’ve built workflows around AI-generated vocal personas on other tools.
The policy makes sense on paper. Open voice cloning creates real misuse risks, and ElevenLabs’ consent-first approach is the responsible call. But for creators already loyal to Suno or Udio with a working voice and workflow in place, it’s a hard wall with no workaround.
The thread’s consensus: ElevenMusic is a strong starting point for new creators. For anyone already settled into another platform, there isn’t enough here yet to make switching worth it.
ElevenMusic Reddit Reviews: The ‘uncanny valley’ problem isn’t solved — just shrinking

Another thread on r/udioMusic flagged what may be ElevenMusic’s most honest limitation: the vocals are better than most AI tools, but they still sound like AI. The improvement is real, but the synthetic quality hasn’t disappeared — it’s just less obvious.
The practical implication: for background music, instrumentals, or content where vocals are secondary, that gap doesn’t matter much. For creators who need vocals that pass as human — think music for ads, artist projects, or anything with emotional stakes — ElevenMusic isn’t there yet. Use case determines whether this is a dealbreaker or a non-issue.
ElevenMusic Reddit Reviews: The licensing and platform play most people are missing

This thread from r/BlackboxAI_ gets at something the casual coverage of ElevenMusic tends to gloss over.
Licensing is ElevenMusic’s structural advantage, not a marketing talking point. Audio quality across all AI music tools will keep improving — that race eventually converges. Legal liability from unlicensed training data doesn’t disappear with a model update. Suno and Udio settled their copyright disputes, but the underlying exposure doesn’t fully go away. ElevenLabs built clean from the start.
Also, ElevenMusic didn’t launch as a generator with a discovery tab bolted on. It launched as a platform — creation and discovery bundled together from day one. Suno and Udio are tools you go to when you want to make something. ElevenMusic is designed to keep you there even when you don’t. That changes the retention dynamic completely, and it’s the part the community says most people are underestimating.
ElevenMusic Reddit Reviews: Check out this useful ElevenMusic Review on Reddit

On the positive side, ElevenMusic’s prompt fidelity stands out. The model is unusually literal — ask for just guitar and vocals, that’s exactly what you get. No unwanted drums, no filler instrumentation. Lyric articulation is strong too, with clean pronunciation and clear timbre. The built-in AI sound effects — thunder, sirens, ambient textures — are handled tastefully and layered into tracks naturally, which is an area where Suno visibly falls short. Generation is fast at around 15 seconds per output, and the model reads style markers well.
The negatives are harder to ignore. ElevenLabs’ deep roots in spoken word generation appear to be working against it here. The model prioritises how words sound over how the music feels — melodic progression takes a back seat to lyric adherence. The result is tracks that are technically correct but not always pleasant to listen to. Deviate from a simple, structured prompt and output quality drops noticeably. Over-prompting causes the model to hallucinate. And the credit cost is steep — roughly 7,000 credits per song, meaning a 110,000-credit bank runs dry after about 15 tracks.
The user’s own tldr says it best: interesting features, but not yet great at generating listenable content. For a v1 app, that’s an honest place to be — the question is how fast ElevenLabs closes that gap.
ElevenMusic Reddit Reviews: Pricing reality check for ElevenMusic

At roughly 7,200 credits per generation, the Starter bundle at $6/month gets you about 3 songs. The Creator bundle at $22/month gets you 17. The Pro plan at $100/month gets you 85. Compare that to Suno, where the same budgets stretch significantly further, and the per-song cost gap is hard to ignore — especially for creators who need volume to find a track they actually like.
AI music generation — on any platform — is probabilistic. You rarely nail it on the first attempt. On Suno, running 50 to 100 generations to find one great track is a normal part of the workflow. On ElevenMusic, that same experimentation process could burn through an entire monthly plan. The credit model assumes you know what you want before you generate, which isn’t how most creators actually work.
The bottom line: ElevenMusic’s pricing makes sense if you generate with intention and get good results quickly. It penalises the exploratory, high-volume workflow that most AI music creators rely on.
ElevenMusic Hacker News Reviews: A tool for non-artists, a threat to nobody’s craft (yet)
The Hacker News thread on ElevenMusic drew 271 comments and split neatly into two camps: people who tried it and found it technically impressive but musically hollow, and people debating what AI-generated music means for the industry at large.
You can explore the thread here: ElevenMusic on HackerNews
On output quality:

Musicians in the thread were the harshest critics. A guitarist with over two decades of experience described the AI’s phrasing as random — noting that blues musicians use their instrument to say something, and ElevenMusic’s output felt like a solo played by someone who had never heard the emotion behind the genre. Others described the tracks as having all the individual components of real music assembled by someone with no understanding of how music actually works. The uncanny valley critique that surfaced on Reddit shows up here too — technically closer to human, but still clearly synthetic.
On use case:

The more measured voices landed on a consistent conclusion: ElevenMusic makes the most sense for non-musicians who need functional audio — podcast intros, background tracks, video content, game placeholder music. For that use case, the bar is “good enough,” and ElevenMusic clears it. For creators with genuine musical intent, it falls short. One HN commenter put it plainly: the tool is great for commercial-sounding music, but nothing about the output sounds fresh or exciting.
On the bigger picture:

The thread’s most interesting tension was between musicians who felt the tool misunderstood what music actually is — something communicative, physical, and relational — and pragmatists who argued that most music consumed daily has never had those qualities anyway. Several commenters noted that the music industry has been optimising for cheapness long before AI arrived, and that ElevenMusic is just the latest step in a trend, not the cause of it.
The collaborative gap:

Multiple HN users flagged what they actually want from AI music tools — not full song generation from a single prompt, but iterative collaboration. Feed in a guitar riff, get a drum track back. Upload a demo, receive a stem. ElevenMusic doesn’t do this yet, and that gap keeps it out of reach for working musicians who might otherwise use it as part of a real creative process.
The overall HN read: a technically interesting v1 product aimed squarely at content creators who need audio, not musicians who make it.
ElevenMusic Creator reviews: Strong on instrumentals, weaker on vocals
One creator who ran a six-month, 500-track test across Suno, Udio, and ElevenLabs Music offered the most granular breakdown available: “I tested 20 vocal song requests on ElevenLabs. Three were usable. The rest sounded robotic and emotionally flat. If you need songs with singing, use Suno or Udio. ElevenLabs is for instrumentals.”
However, the instrumental game is strong. For ambient background music, corporate soundtracks, or podcast beds, ElevenLabs cranks these out in 25 to 30 seconds.
One creator from the Music Radio Creative community who tested ElevenMusic at the ElevenLabs Summit 2026 described an unexpectedly compelling output: “I have asked ElevenMusic to create me a 30 sec music peace for strolling across the meadow pixar style. It blew my mind!”
The broader tech community: ElevenLabs is playing a longer game
The real test won’t be the launch buzz — it’ll be whether creators still care about ElevenMusic six months from now when the novelty wears off. That’s the core skeptic’s argument across tech media coverage: the AI music market moves fast, and ElevenLabs is walking into a fight that’s already well underway.
The bull case, from analyst commentary: ElevenLabs no longer wants to just lend its voice to the industry. It aims to become one of the interfaces through which audio generated by AI is created, listened to, remixed, and monetized.
Why the licensing angle matters more than most people realize

AI-generated music sits in legally murky territory — at least for tools that trained on copyrighted recordings. In 2024, the RIAA filed copyright suits against both Suno and Udio. By late 2025, both companies reached settlement agreements with major labels, though the exact terms aren’t fully public, and the commercial use rights granted to end users still carry some ambiguity depending on how the output is used.
ElevenLabs went a different route. Their commercially safe music model has been live since August 2025, built on licensed training data through deals with Merlin and Kobalt. Merlin represents thousands of independent labels. Kobalt is one of the largest music publishing companies in the world. That’s meaningful coverage.
For creators who run YouTube channels with monetization enabled, produce music for client videos, or license tracks for commercial use, that distinction removes a real risk from the equation. ElevenLabs Music produces good-quality output that has improved steadily since launch. It does not yet match Suno or Udio at their respective peaks, but it is more than adequate for most commercial use cases.
Learn more about how to earn using ElevenMusic app: How do creators earn money on Music Marketplace?
Who should use ElevenMusic — and who shouldn’t

ElevenMusic works best for:
- Content creators who need royalty-free AI background music for videos, podcasts, or reels
- Developers building apps that need an AI background music generator free or paid via API
- ElevenLabs users already on the platform for free AI voice text to speech — the integrated workflow is a real convenience
- Businesses needing commercial-use music without copyright exposure
It’s less suited for:
- Creators who need strong vocal-led tracks (Suno handles this better)
- Users who want granular editing controls over individual song segments
- Heavy experimenters on a tight budget — the credit structure rewards committed users more than casual ones
How Do Creators Actually Make Money on ElevenLabs’ Music Marketplace?
Once you hit publish on a song, it doesn’t just sit in your account—it goes into the Eleven Music Marketplace as a product people can actually buy and license. Every time someone purchases your track, you earn a share of that sale, which shows up as rewards in your ElevenLabs account.
Think of it like running your own mini stock-music catalog powered by AI.
How the Earning Model Works
When a user buys your song for their content (videos, podcasts, ads, apps, etc.), a portion of that purchase amount is credited to you.
- Earnings start at 25% of the purchase price.
- Your share can increase over time if you’re an active creator on the platform.
- Applicable fees and taxes may be deducted before payout.
Everything you earn from all your songs is added up as rewards inside your account, and you can cash out through ElevenLabs’ existing payout system.
Learn more about payouts and payments: ElevenMusic Payouts
What You See in Your Dashboard
ElevenLabs gives you visibility into how your catalog performs, so you’re not flying blind. You can:
- See how many times each song has been purchased.
- Track your total earnings across all published songs.
- Spot which styles, moods, or genres are actually selling.
This feedback loop is powerful: once you see what works, you can double down and create more of it.
Upload Rules You Need to Know
To keep the marketplace useful and avoid spam, there are a few guardrails:
- You can upload a maximum of five tracks per day.
- Only one variation of each track can be published at a time.
- If you publish a new variation of an existing track, the previous version is automatically removed.
Net effect: the platform pushes you toward quality over mindless volume. You’re better off shipping strong, well-thought-out tracks instead of dumping endless low-effort variations.
Step-by-Step: How You Actually Earn
- Create your track using ElevenMusic.
- Publish it to the Music Marketplace (respecting the daily and variation limits).
- Let users discover and purchase your song for their projects.
- Earn a share of each purchase, starting at 25%, with potential upside as an active creator.
- Track performance and rewards in your dashboard.
- Withdraw your earnings through the standard ElevenLabs payout system when you’re ready.
In short: you’re not being paid for “views” or “streams.” You’re getting paid every time someone decides your track is worth pulling out their wallet for—and that’s a much cleaner, more creator-aligned model.
What ElevenMusic means for the music industry
ElevenMusic is a signal. By broadening its offering to encompass music and more extensive creative tools, the company is clearly seeking to move up the value chain: reducing reliance on a single model, while establishing a more direct relationship with creators and users.
For the wider industry, more competition at this level means faster innovation, lower prices, and better tools across the board. The question of what AI music does to professional composers, stock music libraries, and independent musicians is real and unresolved. But ElevenLabs’ licensed-data approach at least suggests the industry is finding ways to build these tools with the rights holders, rather than in spite of them.
ElevenLabs is also hiring for a consumer marketing role to grow its music vertical, and could offer royalty or other incentives for users to create more music on its platform. If that materialises, ElevenMusic could become a creator economy play — not just a generation tool.
Action points: How to use ElevenMusic right now
Step 1 — Download and start free. ElevenMusic is available on the App Store. No credit card required. You get seven generations per day.
Step 2 — Test with instrumental prompts first. Based on early creator reviews, ElevenMusic’s strongest output is ambient, instrumental, and background-style tracks. Start there before attempting vocal-heavy genres.
Step 3 — Explore the discovery feed before generating. Browse what others have made. Remixing an existing community track can get you to a good result faster than prompting from scratch.
Step 4 — Compare commercially. If you produce content that earns ad revenue, run a side-by-side test between ElevenMusic and Suno. Quality may be comparable for your use case, but ElevenMusic’s licensing clarity removes a layer of legal risk.
Step 5 — Evaluate the Pro plan based on volume. If you need more than seven tracks per day, the $9.99/month plan is competitive. At 500 tracks per month, the per-track cost is under two cents.
Tip: Use Sectional Building: For better results, generate a 30-second intro first, then use the “+ Add Section” button to build your song piece-by-piece to maintain control over the structure.
Explore music created using ElevenMusic here: ElevenMusic YouTube Channel
FAQs on ElevenMusic app
What is the ElevenLabs Music Generator release date?
ElevenMusic officially launched on April 1, 2026, though it had been listed on the Apple App Store for several weeks prior to that date.
Is ElevenMusic free?
Yes. The free tier lets you generate up to seven songs per day with no credit card required. A Pro plan at $9.99/month or $95.90/year unlocks 500 tracks per month and more storage.
Is ElevenMusic AI free for commercial use?
On the free tier, commercial rights may be limited. The Pro plan provides clearer commercial use rights. ElevenLabs’ music model was trained on licensed data, which gives it stronger commercial safety than competitors who settled copyright disputes after the fact.
What is text to music AI, and how does ElevenMusic fit that category?
Text-to-music AI means generating a song from a written description — no instruments, no production software needed. ElevenMusic does this and is currently free within the daily generation limit, making it one of the more accessible free AI music creators available.
How does Eleven Music AI compare to Suno?
Suno leads on vocal quality, genre variety, and editing features. ElevenMusic leads on commercial licensing clarity and is stronger for instrumental tracks. Casual creators often prefer Suno; creators with commercial needs lean toward ElevenMusic.
Can I use ElevenMusic as an AI background music generator for free?
Yes. The free tier supports up to seven daily generations, making it usable as a free AI background music generator for podcasts, videos, and reels — with the caveat that commercial use terms should be checked for free-tier output.
Is ElevenMusic only available on iOS?
At launch, yes — ElevenMusic is iOS-only. The ElevenLabs music API has been available separately since August 2025 for developers building on web and other platforms.
What makes ElevenMusic different from other royalty-free AI music studio tools?
ElevenLabs built its music model using licensed training data from day one — through deals with Merlin and Kobalt — avoiding the copyright disputes that affected Suno and Udio. That makes it a stronger option as a royalty-free AI music studio for commercial work.
Does ElevenMusic work as an AI sound effects generator?
ElevenLabs offers a separate AI sound effects generator through its broader creative platform. ElevenMusic itself focuses on full-track music generation, not standalone sound effects.
What moods and styles does ElevenMusic support?
The app includes mood-based playlists and daily mixes covering Focus, Energy, Relax, Late Night, Cosmic, and Chill — plus a full prompt system that accepts genre, instrumentation, and lyric style descriptions.
Can I remix other people’s songs on ElevenMusic?
Yes. The app has a discovery feed of community-created tracks. You can take any track and remix it using a text prompt. Remixes count toward your daily generation limit.
Is there an Android version of ElevenMusic?
Not at launch. ElevenMusic is currently iOS-only. ElevenLabs has not confirmed an Android release date.
How does ElevenMusic fit into the ElevenLabs AI for creators ecosystem?
ElevenMusic sits alongside ElevenLabs’ voice generator, ElevenReader, sound effects tools, and creative suite (covering ad generation, voice-overs, video, and image generation). For creators already using ElevenLabs for free AI voice text to speech, ElevenMusic adds music generation to the same platform.
What are the risks of using AI-generated music for commercial content?
The main risk is copyright exposure if the tool’s training data included protected recordings. ElevenLabs mitigated this by using licensed data. For Suno and Udio, settlements with major labels have reduced — but not entirely eliminated — that risk for paid subscribers.
Who owns the music I make?
You maintain “full authorship,” but the commercial rights depend on your plan. Paid users get full commercial rights for most projects.
What is a “Voice AI startup”?
It refers to companies like ElevenLabs that specialize in creating realistic, human-like artificial intelligence for speech and audio.
Can I use ElevenMusic for a YouTube video?
Yes. Even the basic plans allow for social media and monetized video use.
Does ElevenMusic support languages other than English?
Yes, it supports English, Spanish, German, Japanese, French, and more.
Can I separate the drums from the vocals on ElevenMusic?
Yes, the Pro plan offers “stem separation” into 2, 4, or 6 tracks.
Is there a mobile app for ElevenMusic?
Currently, ElevenMusic is available on the iOS App Store for iPhone and iPad. Android and web versions are also accessible.
Can I mention real artist names in prompts?
No. The app has safety filters that block the use of real artist, band, or copyrighted song titles.
How long can a generated song be on ElevenMusic?
Songs can be between 3 seconds and 5 minutes long.
What are “Music Finetunes” on ElevenMusic?
A feature where you upload your own audio to train the AI to copy your specific “branded” sound.
Why is ElevenMusic considered “safer” than Suno?
Because it is trained on 100% licensed data from partners like Merlin and Kobalt, reducing the risk of copyright lawsuits.
What is the “uncanny valley”?
It’s when AI-generated audio sounds very close to human but has strange glitches that make people feel uncomfortable.
How much can I earn on the ElevenMusic marketplace?
Earnings start at 25% of the purchase price and can increase based on how active you are and how many people buy your song.
Can I export the song to a DAW like Ableton or Logic on ElevenMusic?
Yes. You can download high-fidelity WAV or MP3 files to further edit in professional software.
More on AppliedAI Tools covering ElevenLabs
- Build AI Podcast Generator: Script to Audio with ElevenLabs v3, OpenAI, Vercel, Supabase
- Using ElevenLabs v3 (alpha) AI voice model for TTS use cases
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