Many Suno users ask: "Can I sing my own voice into a Suno song?" The answer is yes—with a few working methods and caveats. Whether you want to record a vocal snippet, extend your voice into a full song, or replace Suno’s vocals with your own, there are ways to make it happen. Here's a fully detailed guide with real-user tips and screenshots to help you create AI songs featuring your real voice.
This is the easiest method to incorporate your voice:
Record yourself singing or speaking—6 to 60 seconds—preferably a clip with clean audio and relevant melody or lyrics.
On Suno, go to Create → Upload Audio, select your clip.
Choose Extend (to build beyond your clip) or Cover (to remake it with instrumentation).
Add song style and lyrics, then click Create. Suno will use your audio as the starting point—sometimes capturing tone, inflection, and your vocal style.
Reddit users confirm:
“Record up to 2?minutes of your voice. Upload it … then prompt and it output someone who kind of sings a bit like me, but better.”
Results vary: sometimes Suno keeps the tone; other times it shifts dramatically to its default voice.
Suno’s Personas feature saves vocal style but cannot yet create a Persona from your voice uploads. Only vocals generated by Suno can become Personas, though this may change in future updates.
For more reliable replication of your voice:
Generate a Suno song or extend your upload.
Extract the vocal stem (via Suno or third-party tools).
Use a voice-cloning service like LALAL.AI, Kits.ai, Controlla Voice, or RVC to train a model on your voice.
Use this model to replace that vocal stem, re-syncing with the instrumental in your DAW.
Save the final mix as your full song with your cloned vocals.
This approach gives better voice control but adds complexity and cost (and may require powerful hardware).
Quality matters: Use a good mic and clean recording for the best result.
Use melody: Sing or hum the melody you want—avoid random speech .
Be patient: 50 attempts may yield a single result that sounds like your voice .
Edit in DAW: You can upload your voice extension, then edit stems to clean up or mix vocals yourself.
Q1: Do I need a paid plan?
No. Even free users can upload audio up to 60 seconds and use the Extend feature.
Q2: Can I make a Persona of my voice?
Not yet. Suno only supports Personas created from Suno-generated audio.
Q3: Is vocal stem extraction possible?
Yes. Suno and third-party tools can separate stems, allowing you to blend your vocals using a DAW .
Q4: How many uploads to get good voice match?
Results vary. Some users got one good match after around 20–50 tries .
Q5: Are clones legal for distribution?
Yes, if it’s your own voice. But public release is blocked if the upload includes copyrighted audio.
You can use your own voice in Suno songs—most simply by uploading a vocal clip and using Extend or Cover. While sometimes the results don’t resemble you perfectly, it can produce a natural tone that feels heartfelt and personal.
For creators wanting better results:
Use voice-cloning services (like LALAL.AI, Kits.ai, RVC)
Combine Suno’s audio with your voice in a DAW
Experiment until Suno reflects your unique vocal style
Your voice matters—and with these workflows, you can blend real human tone with AI creativity.
Learn more about AI MUSIC