Suno’s rise has been one of the clearest signs that AI-made music isn’t a fringe experiment anymore. The Cambridge-based startup has gone from a small creative tool to one of the most talked-about engines for generating full songs from simple prompts. And now it has the funding to match its growing influence.
The company announced on Wednesday that it has raised $250 million in new financing led by Menlo Ventures, lifting its valuation to $2.45 billion. The round brings in new backing from NVentures — Nvidia’s venture arm — Hallwood Media, Lightspeed, and Matrix. It’s a major bet on a company trying to build more advanced tools for song creation at a moment when the music industry is wrestling with what AI-generated audio means for artists, labels, and the platforms that host them.
Suno will use the fresh capital to accelerate development on several fronts. The company plans to advance its professional-grade music tools, refine the experience for casual creators, and introduce features that make sharing and social connection a bigger part of the platform.
“This funding enables us to accelerate what we’re building: more sophisticated tools for professionals, more delightful experiences for casual creators, and new ways for people to share and connect socially through music. Most importantly, we’re building an ecosystem where everyone participates together – creators, listeners, and the broader music community,” Suno said in a blog post.
Suno hits $2.45B valuation after $250M raise as it expands its AI music platform and faces rising copyright battles
Suno gives anyone the ability to create full songs from text: lyrics, melody, vocals, and arrangement. Type a phrase like “make a punk rock song about lost cities,” and the system delivers an original track in seconds. What started as a curiosity for hobbyists is now showing up in the workflows of songwriters, producers, and content creators who want a faster way to experiment with ideas. The platform’s recent updates introduced longer tracks, support for audio uploads, and improved generation models that sound noticeably more polished than earlier versions.
The enthusiasm isn’t just coming from consumers. Investor interest has accelerated as AI-generated music picks up steam across streaming platforms. Earlier this year, an AI band called “The Velvet Sundown” drew one million monthly listeners on Spotify, a milestone that pushed the debate over synthetic music into a more public spotlight.
Record labels have been watching this rise closely. Suno has been in a copyright dispute with Warner Music Group, Universal Music Group, and Sony Music Group, all of which argue that training data and artist likeness must be protected. Suno, for its part, says its system produces original works and gives users full rights to their creations.
“Last month, Universal Music Group settled a copyright case with another AI music company Udio. The two companies plan to launch an AI-powered music creation platform in 2026, using licensed music to train the tool,” Reuters reported.
Suno co-founder and CEO Mikey Shulman said the momentum has been building faster than anyone expected. “In just two years, we’ve seen millions of people make their ideas a reality through Suno, from first-time creators to top songwriters and producers integrating the tool into their daily workflows,” he said. The company believes the next step is to push the model further — longer-form music, better vocal synthesis, and tools that make AI-assisted creation feel less experimental and more like a normal part of making songs.
The timing of the raise comes less than a month after Bloomberg reported late last month that the company was in talks to secure more than $100 million in fresh capital, a move that would push its valuation past the $2 billion mark. Wednesday’s announcement confirms that interest, and then some.
The broader industry is beginning to draw clearer lines around how AI music fits into protected catalogs. Last month, Universal Music Group settled a copyright case with Udio, another AI music company. The two agreed to launch an AI-assisted music creation platform in 2026 using licensed catalogs — an early sign of how negotiated access to training material might work going forward.
Founded in 2022 by former Meta and TikTok executives, Suno has tried to position itself as a tool that gives creators more room to experiment, not a platform meant to replace human artists. Whether the industry agrees is an open question. What is clear is that AI-generated music is moving at a speed that’s forcing everyone — labels, artists, platforms, and investors — to rethink what a song is and how future catalogs will be built.
With $250 million behind it and a valuation that puts it far above early-stage experimentation, Suno is stepping into that conversation with a stronger footing. The next year will show whether AI-generated tracks become a mainstream part of music creation or remain a contested frontier that studios and creators are still trying to sort out.



