Migrate from udio to suno.
1 documentation-derived translation pattern — what carries over and what to watch for. Cited to the Feature Parity Map; the audit tells you whether the move is worth it.
Both products generate a full song -- vocals, instrumentation, and auto-written lyrics -- from a single text prompt and return multiple candidates per generation, so the core workflow ports almost directly: take the genre/mood/theme/vocal-style description you give Udio and paste it into Suno's create flow (suno.com/create, Simple mode). Suno returns two candidates per generation like Udio, then Extend builds full-length tracks the same way. Because Udio currently disables downloading of finished audio, video, and stems during its UMG licensing transition, consolidating onto Suno is also how a team regains the ability to actually get exportable files (MP3/WAV) out of the tool -- the prompt-craft transfers, and the deliverable becomes downloadable again.
- Warning: Udio downloads of audio, video, and stems are currently disabled (UMG partnership), so there is no clean file-level export to migrate finished Udio tracks; you typically re-generate the song from the prompt in Suno rather than moving the audio over.
- Warning: Commercial use differs: Udio allows commercial use on all plans but requires 'Created with Udio' attribution on Free, whereas Suno grants commercial rights only on paid (Pro/Premier) plans and not on Free -- re-create commercially-needed tracks on a paid Suno plan.
- Warning: Credit math is not equivalent: Udio charges 2 credits per pair of ~32s clips / 4 per pair of ~130s clips against monthly allowances that do not roll over, while Suno meters its own credit pool, so budget by song count rather than assuming parity.