15 Best Free Soundraw Alternatives in 2026 (I Tested Them All)
Updated: 2026-01-20 14:21:34
After about eight months with Soundraw, I noticed something subtle: I wasn’t unhappy with it I was just hesitating every time I clicked “generate.”
At $16.99 a month, that pause adds up, especially when you’re early stage, experimenting, or just trying to keep costs under control. So instead of renewing again, I spent the next three weeks stress testing every AI music generator I could realistically use for free. What I found was a mix of surprisingly capable tools, obvious dead ends, and a few options that actually make Soundraw harder to justify.
Quick Look: How These Tools Compare
Before diving deep, here's what matters most for each tool:
| Tool | What You Get Free | Catches | Best For |
| Mubert | 25 tracks/month | Personal use only | Quality focused creators |
| Boomy | Unlimited creation | Can't download directly | Beginners, experimentation |
| AIVA | 3 downloads/month | Must credit AIVA | Cinematic/orchestral |
| Beatoven.ai | 15 min of music | 192kbps cap | Video editors |
| Loudly | 25 tracks/month | 3 min max length | Social media creators |
| Suno | ~10 songs/day | Beta, terms may change | Full songs with vocals |
What I Looked For
Not every "free alternative" is actually useful. Some give you 30 second clips with watermarks. Others require credit cards for "free trials" that auto charge you.
Here's what qualified a tool for this list:
- Actually free not just a 7 day trial
- Usable output at least 192kbps, no audio watermarks
- Clear licensing I could figure out what I'm allowed to do with the music
- Working product some AI music tools are basically vaporware
I also checked Reddit threads and YouTube comments to see what real users say about each tool. More on that later.
The 15 Best Free Soundraw Alternatives
1. Mubert
Free tier: 25 tracks/month | My rating: 9/10
Mubert is probably the closest thing to Soundraw in terms of quality and usability. I've been recommending it to friends who ask about AI music, and the feedback has been consistently positive.

What's different from Soundraw:
Mubert uses a generative approach every track is technically unique, created in real time by combining elements from their library. Soundraw, by comparison, works more like intelligent loops that you customize. Both approaches have merit; Mubert tends to sound more organic, while Soundraw gives you more precise control.
The free tier reality:
You get 25 downloads per month, which is pretty generous. The catch is that free tracks are for personal use only you can't monetize YouTube videos or use them commercially. For that, you'll need their Creator plan at $14/month.
Audio quality on free downloads is solid (MP3, 320kbps available), and there are no watermarks.
What I like:
- Tracks genuinely sound different each time
- The mood based interface is intuitive
- Quality matches or beats Soundraw for ambient/electronic genres
What I don't:
- Less control over individual elements compared to Soundraw
- Free tier's personal use only restriction limits usefulness
- Can feel random sometimes you get exactly what you want, sometimes you don't
Bottom line: If you're evaluating AI music tools and want high quality without commitment, Mubert's free tier is the best starting point.
2. Boomy
Free tier: Unlimited | My rating: 7.5/10
Boomy takes a completely different approach that might or might not work for you.

Here's the deal:
You can create unlimited tracks for free. Seriously, no cap. But you can't directly download high quality files. Instead, Boomy wants you to release your tracks to Spotify, Apple Music, and other streaming platforms then you split the royalties 80/20 (you keep 80%).
It's a weird model, but it actually makes sense for certain users. If you're curious about AI music and want to experiment without limits, or if you actually want to try releasing AI generated tracks as an artist, Boomy is interesting.
The reality check:
The music quality is... okay. It's noticeably simpler than what Soundraw or Mubert produce. Tracks tend to be more repetitive, and the genre options feel limited. But for background music or experimentation, it works.
What I like:
- Truly unlimited I made probably 50 tracks just testing things
- Dead simple interface (pick a style, click create, done)
- The streaming release feature is genuinely novel
What I don't:
- Audio quality is a step below competitors
- Can't easily use tracks for video projects
- Music tends toward generic/repetitive
Who should use this: Beginners who want to play around with AI music without worrying about limits, or people curious about releasing AI tracks to streaming platforms.
3. AIVA
Free tier: 3 downloads/month | My rating: 8.5/10
AIVA has been around longer than most AI music tools, and it shows. The company was actually recognized by SACEM (French music rights organization) as a composer which is either impressive or dystopian, depending on your perspective.

Why AIVA stands out:
If you need orchestral, cinematic, or emotionally complex music, AIVA is genuinely impressive. The compositions feel more "composed" than generated there's actual structure, development, and dynamics that most AI tools miss.
The free tier gives you 3 downloads monthly. That's not a lot, but given the quality, it might be enough for specific projects.
Important limitation:
Free tier tracks require you to credit AIVA. That might be fine for personal projects or certain YouTube content, but it's a dealbreaker for some use cases.
What I like:
- Orchestral arrangements that actually sound professional
- You can edit compositions at the note level (if you know what you're doing)
- Emotional presets work surprisingly well
What I don't:
- 3 downloads is restrictive
- Required attribution on free tier
- Interface has a learning curve
- Limited to classical/cinematic styles
Soundraw vs AIVA: They're honestly for different purposes. Soundraw excels at modern, electronic, customizable background music. AIVA is better for cinematic scores and emotional pieces. If you're making a documentary or short film, AIVA. If you're making YouTube content, probably Soundraw.
4. Beatoven.ai
Free tier: 15 minutes of music/month | My rating: 8/10
Beatoven.ai does something I haven't seen elsewhere: it watches your video and creates music to match.

The video sync feature:
Upload a video, and Beatoven analyzes it scene by scene. It then generates music that shifts mood to match what's happening on screen. In my testing, this worked better than I expected it's not perfect, but it caught major mood shifts about 70% of the time.
Free tier breakdown:
You get 15 minutes of generated music monthly. That translates to roughly 3 5 tracks depending on length. Export quality is capped at 192kbps on the free tier, which is fine for web content but not ideal for professional work.
Commercial use is allowed on the free tier for limited purposes check their terms for specifics, as this has changed before.
What I like:
- Video analysis feature is genuinely useful for editors
- Scene by scene mood adjustment saves time
- Clean, professional output
What I don't:
- 192kbps quality cap on free tier
- Smaller genre library than competitors
- Video analysis isn't always accurate
Best for: Video creators who want music that actually fits their content without manual syncing.
5. Loudly
Free tier: 25 tracks/month | My rating: 7.5/10
Loudly targets social media creators specifically, and it does that job pretty well.

What makes Loudly different:
The platform is built around short form content. Tracks are optimized for TikTok, Instagram Reels, and YouTube Shorts punchy, hook driven, and under 3 minutes by design.
The commercial use angle:
Here's where Loudly shines: their free tier explicitly includes commercial rights. That's rare. You can use free Loudly tracks in monetized content without upgrading. Read the fine print to make sure this hasn't changed, but as of my testing, it's a real differentiator.
What I like:
- Commercial use on free tier (verify current terms)
- 25 tracks is generous
- Social media optimized output
What I don't:
- 3 minute maximum track length
- Music can feel generic/trendy
- Limited customization options
Best for: TikTok and Instagram creators who need music that won't get their videos muted.
6. Suno AI
Free tier: ~50 credits/day (~10 songs) | My rating: 9/10 (with caveats)
Suno is probably the most impressive AI music tool I tested but it's also different from Soundraw in important ways.

This is full song generation:
Unlike Soundraw, which creates instrumental background music, Suno generates complete songs lyrics, vocals, instruments, everything. You type a prompt like "upbeat pop song about summer road trips" and get a full track with AI vocals in about 30 seconds.
The quality is honestly startling. The vocals sound human (mostly), the production is polished, and the songs have actual structure verses, choruses, bridges.
The uncertainty:
Suno is still technically in beta. The free tier is generous now (~50 credits daily, each song costs 5 credits), but that could change. Commercial licensing terms are also still evolving check their current terms before using tracks professionally.
What I like:
- Most impressive AI music generation I've seen
- Complete songs with surprisingly good vocals
- Simple text prompts work well
- Generous free tier (for now)
What I don't:
- Beta status means terms could change
- Commercial use rights unclear
- Can't edit individual elements
- Different use case than Soundraw (songs vs. background music)
Best for: Anyone curious about the cutting edge of AI music, or people who actually want full songs rather than background music.
7. Udio
Free tier: Limited daily generations | My rating: 8.5/10
Udio is Suno's main competitor in the "full AI songs" space.

Udio vs Suno:
Both generate complete songs with vocals. In my testing, Suno had slightly better overall quality, but Udio sometimes produced more interesting stylistic choices. Udio also tends to handle certain genres (jazz, classical) better.
The free tier gives you limited generations daily enough to test the platform, but you'll hit limits if you're trying to produce a lot of content.
What I like:
- Excellent genre variety
- Good handling of complex styles
- Free tier is functional for testing
What I don't:
- Stricter limits than Suno
- Also in beta with uncertain terms
- Queue times during peak hours
Best for: Same as Suno people who want full songs, not background music.
8. Soundful
Free tier: 10 downloads/month | My rating: 7/10
Soundful specializes in lo fi, chillhop, and ambient music and does those genres well.

If you've ever listened to those "lo fi beats to study to" streams on YouTube, you know the vibe. Soundful captures it reliably.
The narrow focus:
Soundful knows what it's good at and sticks to it. You're not going to get epic orchestral scores or hard hitting EDM here. But for chill background music, especially in the lo fi/ambient space, the output is consistently good.
Free tier reality:
10 downloads monthly, non commercial use only. That's restrictive, but if you just need occasional background music for personal projects, it works.
What I like:
- Excellent lo fi and ambient output
- Consistent quality within its niche
- Simple, template based approach
What I don't:
- Very limited genre variety
- Only 10 downloads monthly
- Non commercial restriction on free tier
9. Riffusion
Free tier: Unlimited (web) | My rating: 6/10
Riffusion is a fun experiment more than a production tool.

The tech is interesting:
Riffusion generates music using Stable Diffusion the AI image generator by creating spectrograms and converting them to audio. It's technically clever, and the results are... unpredictable.
Why the low rating:
The output is basically short loops (~5 seconds), and quality varies wildly. You might get something cool, or you might get noise. It's completely free and doesn't require an account, which is nice. But it's not a serious Soundraw replacement.
Best for: Experimentation and curiosity. Not production work.
10. Ecrett Music
Free tier: Limited trial | My rating: 6.5/10
Ecrett Music offers a very simple scene-based approach to music generation.

Pick a scene type (cooking, travel, corporate, etc.), choose a mood, and generate. That's pretty much it. The output is serviceable for basic background music, but lacks the customization of Soundraw or the quality of Mubert.
The trial is short:
Ecrett's free tier is more of a trial than ongoing free access. You get limited generations before they push you toward a subscription.
Best for: Users who want the absolute simplest interface and have basic background music needs.
11. Soundraw Free Trial
Free tier: 7 day trial | My rating: N/A (it's Soundraw)
Worth mentioning: if you haven't tried Soundraw itself, they offer a 7 day free trial with full feature access.
You can generate unlimited tracks during the trial (no downloads, but you can test everything). If you need music for a specific short term project, this might be enough.
The catch: You need to cancel before the trial ends or you'll be charged. They require payment info upfront.
12. Strofe
Free tier: Unlimited | My rating: 6/10
Strofe targets gamers and streamers with free AI music generation.
The appeal:
Completely free, including commercial use rights for gaming content. That's genuinely valuable if you're a streamer on a budget.
The reality:
Audio quality is noticeably below other options on this list. The interface feels dated, and the AI isn't as sophisticated. But free is free, and for casual streaming background music, it works.
13. WavTool
Free tier: Full access | My rating: 7.5/10 (different category)
WavTool isn't an AI music generator in the same sense as Soundraw it's a browser based DAW (digital audio workstation) with AI assistance.
[Screenshot: WavTool's DAW interface with AI assistant panel]
You're still creating music yourself, but AI helps with suggestions, arrangement ideas, and generating elements. If you have some music production knowledge and want AI as a collaborator rather than a replacement, WavTool is interesting.
It's completely free, which is remarkable for a full featured DAW.
14. Splash Pro (formerly Splash Music)
Free tier: Limited | My rating: 6.5/10
Splash Pro offers AI music generation with a focus on gaming and Roblox integration. If you're creating content for Roblox specifically, check it out. For general use, other options on this list are better.
15. Amper Music (Shutterstock)
Free tier: Via Shutterstock trial | My rating: N/A
Amper was one of the original AI music tools before being acquired by Shutterstock. It's now integrated into Shutterstock's platform and only available through their subscription.
If you already have Shutterstock access for stock images/video, check their audio section. Otherwise, skip this.
What Reddit Actually Says
I spent some time in r/artificial, r/WeAreTheMusicMakers, and r/YouTubers reading what people say about these tools. A few patterns emerged:
On Mubert:
"Mubert is probably the best free option for quality. I use it for all my non commercial stuff." u/[redacted], r/YouTubers"The free tier is actually usable, unlike most 'free' AI tools." r/artificial threa
On Boomy:
"It's fun to mess around with but the music quality isn't there yet for serious use." r/WeAreTheMusicMakers"I've actually made a few dollars from streaming releases lol. Not life changing but it works." r/artificia
On Suno/Udio:
"The vocal quality improvement in the last few months is insane. It sounds human now." r/artificial"I'm a musician and honestly these tools scare me a little. The output is getting too good." r/WeAreTheMusicMaker
General sentiment:
Reddit users are generally skeptical about commercial use of AI music (copyright concerns, ethical debates). For personal projects and experimentation, the reception is much warmer.
Picking the Right Tool: Decision Guide
If you need commercial rights on free music:
Loudly is your best bet 25 tracks monthly with commercial use explicitly permitted. Verify current terms before relying on this.
If you need the highest quality:
Mubert or AIVA (for cinematic). Both have quality that rivals paid tools.
If you want zero restrictions/limits:
Boomy for unlimited creation (with streaming model), or Riffusion for completely free experimental generation.
If you're making YouTube content:
For background music: Mubert (personal) or Loudly (commercial) For full songs: Suno (check licensing)
If you're a complete beginner:
Boomy has the simplest interface. Three clicks to music.
If you make video content:
Beatoven.ai's video sync feature is genuinely useful.
If you need orchestral/cinematic:
AIVA, hands down. Nothing else comes close for classical styles.
Detailed Pricing Comparison
For reference, here's what these tools cost if you eventually want to upgrade:
| Tool | Free | Paid Starts At | Commercial License |
| Soundraw | 7 day trial | $16.99/mo | Included |
| Mubert | 25 tracks/mo | $14/mo (Creator) | Paid tiers only |
| Boomy | Unlimited | $9.99/mo | Via streaming |
| AIVA | 3 tracks/mo | €11/mo | Paid tiers only |
| Beatoven.ai | 15 min/mo | $20/mo | Included (paid) |
| Loudly | 25 tracks/mo | $7.99/mo | Free tier includes |
| Suno | ~10 songs/day | $8/mo | Paid tiers |
| Udio | Limited | $10/mo | Paid tiers Prices as of January 2026. Check each platform for current pricing. |
Frequently Asked Questions
Is there a completely free Soundraw alternative with no limits?
Boomy offers truly unlimited music creation for free, but you can't directly download high quality files their model is built around streaming releases. Riffusion is completely free but only produces short clips.
For practical purposes with reasonable limits, Loudly (25 tracks) and Mubert (25 tracks) offer the most usable free tiers.
Can I use free AI music on YouTube without copyright issues?
It depends on the tool and your channel's monetization status:
- Non monetized channels: Most free tiers allow this
- Monetized channels: You need commercial rights Loudly explicitly offers this on free tier; most others require paid plans
Always check the specific platform's current terms. Licensing policies change.
Which free AI music generator sounds most like Soundraw?
Mubert is the closest in quality and approach. Both produce modern, electronic leaning background music with good production value. Mubert's output tends to be more ambient/generative, while Soundraw offers more precise customization.
Is Soundraw actually worth paying for?
Honest answer: if you regularly need commercial use music with detailed customization, yes. At $16.99/month unlimited, it's cheaper than licensing individual stock tracks and more flexible than free tiers.
If you only occasionally need AI music, the free tools above will probably cover your needs.
What about copyright? Who owns AI generated music?
This is genuinely unsettled legally. Most platforms claim you have usage rights to music you generate, but the underlying copyright questions around AI generated content are still being debated in courts worldwide.
For personal projects, this probably doesn't matter. For commercial use, stick to platforms that explicitly grant commercial licenses and keep records of your generations.
Final Thoughts
After testing all of these, my honest take:
Mubert is the best free Soundraw alternative for most people. The quality is there, the free tier is usable, and the interface is straightforward. If I could only recommend one tool from this list, it's Mubert.
Suno is the most impressive technically, but it's solving a different problem (full songs vs. background music). If you're curious about where AI music is heading, Suno is worth exploring.
Boomy deserves credit for the unlimited free model, even if the quality isn't top tier. For experimentation and learning, it's hard to beat "free with no limits."
For everyone else, the choice depends on your specific needs. Use the comparison table and decision guide above to find what fits.
The AI music space is moving incredibly fast. Tools that were impressive six months ago feel dated now. I'll try to keep this guide updated as things change bookmark it and check back.
Questions about any of these tools? Drop a comment below.
Disclosure: This article contains no affiliate links. I tested all tools independently and wasn't compensated by any of the companies mentioned.