Suno workflow, updated May 10, 2026
From a Suno song to a finished music video
You generated the track. Now what? Drop the MP3 into Dayvid, get a music video with synced captions in the format you need, and publish to YouTube, TikTok, or Reels. No video editor in between.
The Suno-shaped gap
Suno gives you the song. The platforms want a video. Between them is a video editor, a stock-image hunt, lyric timing by ear, exports, transcoding, and a manual upload to YouTube Studio. That gap is the part where most Suno tracks get stuck on the desktop and never make it to a feed.
How Dayvid fits the Suno workflow
Three steps. None of them require a video editor.
Drop the MP3
Export from Suno, upload to a Dayvid Music to Video project. The track becomes the timeline. Captions are auto-transcribed from the audio so the lyrics appear in sync without you typing them out.
Pick the look
Use the Suno cover art as a static background, or switch on moving images and let scene art change with the verses, chorus, and drop. Apply a brand kit to keep your channel visually consistent across releases.
Land it on YouTube
Click publish and the rendered video lands on your channel as a private draft, with title, description, tags, and thumbnail already filled in. Flip privacy to public from YouTube Studio when you are ready.
Try it on your next Suno song. 300 free credits, no card.
One render, multiple platforms
Dayvid renders in the format you need: vertical 9:16 for Shorts, TikTok, and Reels, or 16:9 for traditional YouTube videos and other platforms. Auto-publish to YouTube ships today; TikTok and Reels are manual upload for now (direct publishing for both is in development).
YouTube
Lands on your channel as a private draft, you flip it public when ready.
TikTok
Download the video from Dayvid, upload to TikTok directly. Direct publish in development.
Instagram Reels
Same video, upload to Reels manually. Direct publish in development.
Why this fits the Suno workflow specifically
- Auto-transcription handles AI-generated vocals, including the slightly off-script Suno moments. Edit any line that misheard a word.
- Brand kits keep a series of Suno releases visually consistent without you redoing the thumbnail style each time.
- Use the cover art Suno generated, or upload your own art, or generate scene images for moving-image mode. All three options live in the same flow.
- Pick the aspect ratio that fits your channel: 9:16 for Shorts, TikTok, and Reels, or 16:9 for traditional YouTube videos. No separate export step per platform.
- One subscription covers as many tracks as you ship, no per-export fee.
Pricing in one line
Free tier is 300 credits with no card required, enough to test the flow. Paid plans start at $32.50 per month billed yearly with more credits for a recurring music release schedule.
See plans and pricingFrequently asked questions
No. Dayvid uses your audio as the timeline and renders the video around it. The track plays back at the quality you uploaded. There is no lossy re-encoding of the audio inside the render.
Yes. Download the cover from Suno (or take a screenshot) and upload it as the static background in the Cover step. Or skip Suno's cover entirely and use your own image, or generate a fresh visual.
Skip the captions and let the visuals carry the music video. Either a single strong cover image, or moving-image mode with several scene images that change with the song. Bardcore, lo-fi, and instrumental Suno tracks publish this way all the time.
No. There is no formal partnership between Dayvid and Suno. Dayvid accepts any audio file, including the MP3 you export from Suno, and treats it the same as audio from any other source. The workflow is open: you bring the file, we make the video.
Udio works the same way. The flow does not care which AI music tool generated the audio. There is also a dedicated Udio version of this guide for the Udio-specific workflow notes.
Both. Render in 9:16 (which YouTube treats as a Short within its current length cap, up to 3 minutes today, per YouTube's policy) for short-form, or 16:9 for traditional longform. TikTok and Reels accept the 9:16 render natively.
Dayvid works with any finished audio track: Suno, Udio, SoundCloud links, or your own MP3 upload. The tool is built for music creators, faceless channel operators, and self-publishing artists who have the track ready and need it turned into a social video, with auto-synced subtitles, a visual background, overlays, and an outro in the format you choose (9:16 or 16:9).
Dayvid automates the heavy lifting: your audio becomes the timeline, captions sync automatically from speech-to-text, scene images can change with the song structure, and YouTube publish is one click. You pick the visuals and can edit any misheard lyric, so you are not stuck doing hours of manual editing.
It is built for independent music creators: artists with a finished track from Suno, Udio, or SoundCloud who want to publish without hiring an editor. Faceless channels, self-publishing musicians, and DIY content creators use Dayvid to ship a finished music video without building a timeline by hand.
Ready to ship that Suno track as a real music video?
Start free, 300 credits, no card.
Related
Sources and methodology
External references cited on this page were taken from the linked sources on the dates listed below.
- YouTube Help: Shorts upload length and detection(fetched 2026-05-10)
Suno is a trademark of Suno, Inc. Dayvid is not affiliated with or endorsed by Suno. This page describes a workflow that pairs the two tools, not an official integration.