AI music company Suno is now generating the equivalent of Spotify’s entire catalog every two weeks — an explosion of AI-made music unlike anything the industry has seen.
That’s according to internal documents obtained by Billboard, which found Suno users are creating about 7 million new songs a day. Most users — predominantly men ages 25 to 34 — spend around 20 minutes per session feeding the machine, turning out music at a pace no human listener could ever keep up with.
Suno’s rapid surge comes on the heels of a $250 million funding round that pushed the company’s valuation to $2.45 billion. CEO Mikey Shulman said the investment will help Suno “expand what’s possible” for both casual creators and professional songwriters already weaving the tool into their workflow.
What Suno wants next is a closed music universe: creation, listening, remixing and social sharing all happening inside the same app. Mockups show TikTok-style feeds, voice-processing tools and a Create Hook button designed to let users build off each other’s tracks, turning music-making into a social loop instead of a solo act.
But the pitch deck also comes with a glaring omission. Suno is facing several major lawsuits over the data used to train its model, including cases brought by indie artists and copyright giants Sony, and Universal (and previously Warner Music Group before they announced a new partnership deal), all totalling up to over $500 million in damages. Meanwhile, competitor Udio has already struck deals with labels and begun tightening its service to avoid similar blowback.
Still, Suno is projecting enormous growth. The company says it has reached one million subscribers with retention levels most apps would envy. It even predicts $1 billion in revenue by 2028 and imagines a long-term future in which AI-generated music could support a $500 billion ecosystem.
Whether that vision involves cooperation with musicians or just outrunning lawsuits remains to be seen. For now, Suno is flooding the internet with more new music every 24 hours than most listeners will hear in a lifetime — and doing it again the next day.
‘ The preceding article may include information circulated by third parties ’
‘ Some details of this article were extracted from the following source relevantmagazine.com ’














