How we verified this
We don’t run generation tests, we read the fine print. For Soundverse we read the free tier’s own terms, its commercial-use, watermark and attribution rules, then confirmed the cheapest plan that lifts them against the official pricing page, cross-checked across multiple current sources. The watermark and license clauses below are paraphrased from those terms, and the quality score is our editorial read of the tool, not a lab benchmark. Everything here was last verified June 13, 2026.
Watermark & licensing, the part that decides monetization
Why the free plan fails: 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.
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.
“you own all right, title, and interest in and to the audio and other content generated for you by the Services (“Output”). Soundverse and its licensors retain all rights in and to the Platform, models, software, and datasets.”
Pros & cons
Pros
- You own all right, title and interest in your generated Output
- Creator plan grants a royalty-free commercial license for monetized content
- Free stem separation and unlimited projects even on the free tier
- No documented watermark on exports
Cons
- Free plan is Non-commercial use — unusable in a monetized video
- License is non-transferable (you can’t hand the track to a client)
- All copyright/infringement liability sits on you; no provider warranty
- Plan prices are JS-gated on the pricing page (confirm at checkout)
Pricing, which plans are actually safe
| Plan | Price | What you get | Monetization |
|---|---|---|---|
| Free | $0 | 1000 trial tokens, 10 MP3 exports/month, 15–30s tracks, free stem separation — Non-commercial use | Not safe |
| Creator | Paid — amount JS-gated (confirm at checkout) | 4,000 tokens, unlimited MP3/WAV/STEM exports, up to 5-min tracks, royalty-free license | Safe |
| Pro | Paid — amount JS-gated (confirm at checkout) | 10,000 tokens, royalty-free + sample-usage license, priority renders | Safe |
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Alternatives we’ve tested
Suno8.5
AI music · AI songs, free tier non-commercial
Free-tier songs are licensed for personal, non-commercial use only and must credit Suno, so you cannot monetize them.
Mubert6.2
AI music · Free music is non-commercial only
Mubert's Free Remix License is personal, non-commercial only and forces a visible Mubert credit, so free tracks cannot go in a monetized video; Content ID is barred on every plan.
Soundraw3.5
AI music · Royalty-free AI music, paid-only license
The free account only previews and customizes tracks — it grants no download license at all. Soundraw's own help center is explicit: only paid users acquire the license to download and use songs, and there is no free trial of the license. So a faceless creator literally cannot publish or monetize anything made on the free tier. The cheapest paid plan (Creator, $5.99/mo on the current limited-time offer) does grant a royalty-free commercial background-music license that is genuinely safe for YouTube.
FAQ
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.
What’s the cheapest Soundverse plan that’s safe to monetize?
The Creator plan — it’s the first tier with a “Royalty-free license.” The exact price is JS-gated on the pricing page, so confirm it at checkout.