YouTube Music Generator
Music built for video creators. Intro stings, mid-roll underscore, B-roll energy, end-screen outros — no Content ID claims, no copyright strikes, no fight with the algorithm over a borrowed track.
From prompt to finished track
Describe the track
One sentence is enough — genre, mood, tempo, instruments. Start from the YouTube prompts above or write your own.
Generate and iterate
The AI composes an original track from scratch — no samples. Regenerate variations until one fits, or tweak the prompt and lyrics.
Download the MP3
Grab the full song as an MP3 with commercial rights included, ready for videos, streams and playlists.
YouTube styles you can generate
Pick a vibe and let the AI compose. Every track is original — no samples, no copyright headaches.
Vlog Energy
Bright acoustic strum, hand percussion, mid-tempo kick at 108 bpm, the warm daily-vlog underscore that lands on a sunrise B-roll.
Tutorial Underscore
Quiet plucked synth, soft pad, no drums to compete with talking, the deck-walkthrough tone that disappears under instruction.
High-Energy Intro Sting
Five-second drum fill into a chord stab, big snare crack on the last beat, designed to set a logo reveal on the downbeat.
Tech Review Beat
Sidechained synth bass, plucky lead, 120 bpm minimal-house feel, the underscore behind unboxings and hardware comparisons.
Cinematic Travel Score
Slow strings, modulating piano, soft percussion build, the over-the-shoulder drone-shot underscore that lifts a destination reel.
Outro & End-Screen
Twenty-second resolution cue, ambient pad fade, subtle melodic motif, ends on a single sustained chord under the subscribe card.
Who uses youtube music?
Creators reaching for a specific mood without a budget for licensing.
Daily Vloggers
Match underscore to today's topic instead of recycling the same three Epidemic Sound tracks across every upload.
Tech & Review Channels
Distinct music for unboxing, benchmark, and verdict segments. Same channel, three sonic personalities, all royalty-free.
Educational Creators
Quiet beds for explainers, energetic stings for chapter changes, all generated in one session and tonally consistent.
Travel & Lifestyle Vloggers
Cinematic underscore that matches the country, season, and mood of each destination. Generated per video, not pulled from a library.
Filmmaking Channels
Original score for short films and B-roll reels that you can claim as your own work in festival submissions and reels.
Gaming Creators
Custom underscore for stream highlights, longplay edits, and Let's-Play uploads. No more 30-second copyright strikes on your gameplay.
How do you get YouTube background music with no Content ID claims?
A YouTube music generator turns a text prompt into an underscore built for a specific segment of a video — a warm vlog groove at 108 BPM, a quiet tutorial bed that stays out of the way of voiceover, a five-second intro sting timed to a logo reveal, or a cinematic travel score for a drone-shot reel. Describe the segment and the AI composes and renders the whole cue.
The reason this beats pulling from a stock-music library is straightforward: every track is an original composition, so there's no Content ID claim risk and no fight with the algorithm over a borrowed track. Paid plans include a license that keeps monetization intact, which matters more on YouTube than almost anywhere else since a single claimed track can demonetize an upload.
Matching music to the segment, not just the channel
Vlog energy calls for bright acoustic strum, hand percussion and a mid-tempo kick around 108 BPM — the warm daily-vlog underscore for a sunrise B-roll. Tutorial underscore drops the drums entirely for a quiet plucked synth and soft pad that won't compete with talking. A high-energy intro sting is a five-second drum fill into a chord stab with a snare crack timed to a logo reveal, while a tech-review beat runs sidechained synth bass and a plucky lead at 120 BPM for unboxings and hardware comparisons.
Cinematic travel scores use slow strings, modulating piano and a soft percussion build for drone-shot reels, and outro cues resolve with a twenty-second ambient pad fade and a single sustained chord under the subscribe card. Naming the segment and its instrumentation in the prompt is what gets you music that fits the edit instead of generic background noise.
One channel, several distinct sounds
Daily vloggers can match underscore to each video's topic instead of recycling the same handful of stock tracks across every upload. Tech and review channels generate distinct music for unboxing, benchmark and verdict segments so the same channel carries three sonic personalities. Educational creators pair quiet beds for explainers with energetic stings for chapter changes, travel and lifestyle vloggers generate cinematic underscore matched to each destination's mood, filmmaking channels use original scores they can claim as their own work in festival submissions, and gaming creators generate custom underscore for stream highlights and Let's-Play uploads without 30-second copyright strikes.
Length, keys and where the license reaches
For a 10-minute video, generate one or two 3-minute tracks and cross-fade between them; for Shorts, a 30 to 60 second clip is enough — match the length to your edit rather than the other way around. Generate two tracks in the same key, like A minor, and they mix cleanly across a transition. The license is per creator rather than per video, so one generated track can be reused across an entire channel, and it's platform-agnostic — YouTube, Shorts, TikTok, Reels, Twitch and podcasts are all covered by this YouTube music generator's license.
Stop fighting Content ID
Generate cue-perfect underscore for your next upload, claim-free.
Free to try · No credit card required
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Frequently Asked Questions
Will I get a Content ID claim using generated music?
No. Paid plans include a license that prevents Content ID claims. Your monetization remains intact and there's no copyright strike risk.
How long should YouTube background music be?
For 10-minute videos, generate one to two 3-minute tracks and cross-fade. For Shorts, a 30 to 60 second clip is enough. Match length to your edit, not the other way around.
Can I use the same track across my whole channel?
Yes. The license is per creator, not per video. Generate once and reuse across as many videos as you want.
Can I get music in different keys for cross-fading?
Yes. Generate two tracks in the same key — for example, both in A minor — and they'll mix together cleanly across segment transitions.
Does the license cover Shorts, Reels, and TikTok too?
Yes. The commercial license is platform-agnostic. Use generated music on YouTube, YouTube Shorts, TikTok, Reels, Twitch, podcasts, and anywhere else.