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How to Master a Suno Track for Spotify

You finished a song in Suno and it sounds quiet or flat next to real releases on Spotify. Here's what mastering actually does about it.

Why your Suno track sounds quiet on Spotify

Spotify normalizes loudness, but a track that isn't mastered still sounds small — not because of volume, but because it lacks the density, clarity, and low-end control that finished records have. Turning it up in an app doesn't fix that; mastering does.

What mastering actually does

Mastering sets the final tonal balance, controls the low end, adds cohesion, and brings the track to competitive loudness with the headroom streaming wants. Done through a real console and reference converters, it gains a polish and forward energy an algorithmic pass can't match.

Stems beat a stereo bounce

Suno Pro lets you export stems — send those instead of a single stereo file. With the parts separated, the master can be far more precise and translate better everywhere, from earbuds to a car.

What you'll need

  • Your stems — Suno Pro and Udio both let you export separated tracks (vocals, drums, bass, music).
  • A reference track: one song that sounds the way you want yours to.
  • Your target — Spotify, Apple, club play — so the master is aimed right.

Questions

Can I master a Suno song at all?

Yes. Export your stems from Suno Pro, reserve a slot, and it's mastered by hand through the analog chain — AI origin is completely welcome.

How long until it's back?

Within 5 days of sending your files, revisions included.