Index verified 2026-06-13
ClipJury

AI music · monetization check

Can you monetize Soundverse’s free tier?

Not safe on free

Short answer: not as-is.

The Free plan is labeled “Non-commercial use,” so free tracks can’t go in a monetized video; commercial rights start on the Creator plan’s royalty-free license. The cheapest plan that makes Soundverse genuinely safe to monetize is Creator plan — royalty-free commercial license (exact price is JS-gated; confirm at checkout).

By Abdallah AmjidVerified June 13, 2026

Soundverse free tier, at a glance

Free plan
Free: 1000 trial tokens, 10 MP3 exports/month, Text-to-Music 15s & 30s, free stem separation — Non-commercial use
Watermark on free
No watermark documented; the block is the Non-commercial license, not an audio mark
Commercial use on free
No — the Free plan is “Non-commercial use”; commercial use needs the Creator plan’s royalty-free license
Attribution required
None stated on a primary page
Max quality on free
MP3 only on free (15–30s); WAV and STEM exports unlock on paid plans
Cheapest safe plan
Creator (royalty-free commercial license; price JS-gated, confirm at checkout)

Commercial monetization risk

59/ 100 risk

RiskyConfidence: Medium

Based on current public terms this appears high-risk to monetize as-is; there's usually a defined safe fix (a paid tier).

One factor relies on inference or a non-primary source — read the flags.

The safe fix

Free output is Non-commercial use; upgrade to the Creator plan (royalty-free commercial license) before using any track in a monetized video. Exact prices are JS-gated on the pricing page — confirm at checkout.

See the 7-factor evidence breakdown

Reproduce it yourself: each factor's risk points = weight × level ÷ 4 (an unclear factor counts as half its weight). The seven add up to 59. Every scored factor quotes Soundverse’s own current terms, pricing or help page.

  1. Commercial-use rights

    Level 4/428 / 28 pts

    Does the license actually permit monetizing the free-tier output (monetized video / paid client deliverable)? The single most decisive factor.

    Non-commercial use
    soundverse.aiPricing pagechecked 2026-06-17

    The Free plan card lists “Non-commercial use” as a feature; commercial rights begin on the Creator plan (“Royalty-free license”). So free output cannot be used in a monetized video — the decisive L4.

  2. Free-plan monetization gate

    Level 1/44.5 / 18 pts

    Free-tier blockers that make output unusable even when commercial use is allowed: watermark, 'personal-only' wording, publish-barring caps.

    Limited exports (10 MP3 exports a month)
    soundverse.aiPricing pagechecked 2026-06-17

    Free exports are a clean MP3 with no documented watermark, only capped at 10/month and short lengths (15s, 30s). The publishable-asset gate is cosmetic; the real block is the non-commercial license (scored under commercialUse).

  3. Output ownership & sublicensing

    Level 1/44 / 16 pts

    Do you own (or get a clean, transferable, sublicensable license to) the output? Decisive for agency/client work where rights must be handed over.

    you own all right, title, and interest in and to the audio and other content generated for you by the Services (“Output”)
    soundverse.aiTermschecked 2026-06-17

    You own your Output, but the Terms also say “You may not assign or delegate these Terms or any rights or obligations under these Terms,” so the license is non-transferable to a client — ownership with a transfer limit = L1.

  4. Attribution / branding obligation

    Unclear6 / 12 pts

    Must you credit the tool, keep a logo, or disclose it by name? An enforceable monetization burden even when commercial use is allowed.

    Not certified — we could not confirm this from a Soundverse primary source, so it is scored as Unclear (half weight) rather than guessed.

    No user-attribution/credit requirement is stated on a primary Soundverse page (the “Credits” section is an academic dataset citation, not a creator-credit rule), and paid tiers are “royalty-free.” Cannot confirm “no attribution” from a positive quote, so left unclear.

  5. Copyright & training-data exposure

    Level 3/49 / 12 pts

    Risk the output infringes third-party rights or triggers a platform claim: training-data provenance, indemnity, likeness/voice-clone consent, YouTube synthetic-content exposure.

    You are solely responsible for your User Content, Output, and your use and distribution thereof.
    soundverse.aiTermschecked 2026-06-17

    The Terms place all responsibility on the user (“You are responsible for ensuring your User Content and Output do not infringe the rights of others”), with no provider warranty — all liability on the user = L3, typical for an AI music generator that may also trigger YouTube synthetic-content disclosure.

  6. Terms stability

    Level 2/44 / 8 pts

    How likely are today's rights to be quietly changed or revoked tomorrow? Modification clause, retroactivity, notice, and observed change history. The factor the ToS-monitor sells against.

    We may change or modify these Terms by posting a revised version on the Site or by otherwise providing notice to you
    soundverse.aiTermschecked 2026-06-17

    Broad unilateral right to change the Terms, where posting a revised version on the site counts as notice — L2.

  7. Creator practicality

    Level 2/43 / 6 pts

    The gap between 'technically licensed' and 'actually usable safely': terms clarity/findability, login-gated pricing, credit-model traps. Modulates, never decides.

    Pay Monthly Pay Yearly Save 20%
    soundverse.aiPricing pagechecked 2026-06-17

    Plan features are public, but the actual dollar amounts for Creator/Pro/Max are JS-injected (only the billing toggle renders to a static fetch), so the price is effectively JS-gated — L2.

What we couldn’t confirm from a primary source

  • No attribution/credit requirement is stated on a primary Soundverse page, so the no-attribution assumption is left unclear rather than asserted.

ClipJury's monetization-risk verdicts are an editorial read of each tool's own current public terms and pricing as of the last-checked date — not legal advice. Terms change; always confirm against the linked sources before relying on any tool for monetized or paid client work. How we score risk →

Why the free tier isn’t safe to monetize

Soundverse makes AI music and, unusually, lets you own your Output. But the Free plan is explicitly “Non-commercial use,” so it can’t be used in a monetized video. The Creator plan adds a royalty-free commercial license; you keep ownership of the track, but the license is non-transferable, so you can’t hand it to a client.

Watermark

Soundverse does not document an audible watermark on free exports. The free-tier block is contractual, not a mark: the pricing page lists “Non-commercial use” on the Free plan, and the Creator plan is the first tier with a “Royalty-free license.” Free exports are also capped at 10 MP3 downloads a month and short 15–30s lengths.

License

Soundverse’s Terms say “you own all right, title, and interest in and to the audio and other content generated for you by the Services (‘Output’),” while Soundverse retains rights in its platform, models and datasets. But the Free plan grants only “Non-commercial use” (pricing page), and the Terms bar assignment (“You may not assign or delegate these Terms”), so you can’t transfer the license to a client. Commercial use requires the Creator plan’s royalty-free license; you are also “solely responsible” for your Output and any infringement.

The cheapest safe fix

To monetize Soundverse output cleanly — no watermark, full commercial rights — you need Creator plan — royalty-free commercial license (exact price is JS-gated; confirm at checkout). That’s the plan we’d actually pay for if this were our channel.

Soundverse monetization FAQ

Can you legally monetize Soundverse's free tier on YouTube?
Not as-is. The Free plan is labeled “Non-commercial use,” so free tracks can’t go in a monetized video; commercial rights start on the Creator plan’s royalty-free license. To monetize safely you need Creator plan — royalty-free commercial license (exact price is JS-gated; confirm at checkout). Soundverse makes AI music and, unusually, lets you own your Output. But the Free plan is explicitly “Non-commercial use,” so it can’t be used in a monetized video. The Creator plan adds a royalty-free commercial license; you keep ownership of the track, but the license is non-transferable, so you can’t hand it to a client.
Does Soundverse put a watermark on free exports?
Soundverse does not document an audible watermark on free exports. The free-tier block is contractual, not a mark: the pricing page lists “Non-commercial use” on the Free plan, and the Creator plan is the first tier with a “Royalty-free license.” Free exports are also capped at 10 MP3 downloads a month and short 15–30s lengths.
What does Soundverse's free license actually allow?
Soundverse’s Terms say “you own all right, title, and interest in and to the audio and other content generated for you by the Services (‘Output’),” while Soundverse retains rights in its platform, models and datasets. But the Free plan grants only “Non-commercial use” (pricing page), and the Terms bar assignment (“You may not assign or delegate these Terms”), so you can’t transfer the license to a client. Commercial use requires the Creator plan’s royalty-free license; you are also “solely responsible” for your Output and any infringement.
Can I use Soundverse’s free tier in a monetized YouTube video?
No. The Free plan is labeled “Non-commercial use” on Soundverse’s pricing page, so free tracks can’t be used in monetized content. Commercial use starts on the Creator plan, which adds a royalty-free license.
Do I own the music I make with Soundverse?
Yes — the Terms say “you own all right, title, and interest” in your Output. But the license is non-transferable (“You may not assign or delegate these Terms”), so you can’t hand the track to a client, and you’re solely responsible for any infringement.

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