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How to Export Stems from Suno Pro (and What to Send)

Stems give a real engineer control that a single stereo file never can. Here's how to get them out of Suno Pro and what to hand over.

Why stems, not a stereo file

When you send one finished stereo track, the vocal, drums, bass, and music are already glued together — an engineer can only nudge the whole thing. Stems keep them separate, so the vocal can be brought forward, the low end tuned, and the balance actually fixed.

Getting stems out of Suno Pro

On Suno's paid plans you can export separated stems for a song rather than just the master. Grab the stem set — typically vocals plus the instrumental broken out — and keep the files at the highest quality Suno offers. Udio's paid tiers offer the same idea.

What to send over

Send every stem you have, all starting from the same point so they line up, plus a reference track and a note on what's bugging you. That's everything needed to mix or master it properly — and it uploads straight to the studio's secure Disco inbox after you reserve.

What you'll need

  • Your stems — Suno Pro and Udio both let you export separated tracks (vocals, drums, bass, music).
  • All stems starting at the same point (bar 1) so they align.
  • A reference track: one song that sounds the way you want yours to.

Questions

What if I can only get a stereo file?

That's fine — a stereo bounce can still be enriched or mastered. Stems just give the best result, so send them if you can.

Where do I upload?

After you reserve a slot, you get a secure Disco link and 5 days to send your files. It handles big uploads easily.