The best distributor for Suno is the one that accepts AI-generated audio, does not eat your royalties, and fits how often you actually release. We ranked six options.
Suno creators need three things from a distributor: AI-friendly intake, honest economics, and delivery to Spotify without a subscription treadmill. We scored each option on one-time vs. recurring cost, royalty share, Suno-specific workflow (extension import, provenance handling), and catalog infrastructure. AIMD tops the list because it was built for Suno-first workflows at $2 per AI release with 100% royalties.
AIMD is the strongest Suno distributor on workflow and economics. The browser extension imports directly from Suno song pages, AI provenance is scanned before you pay, and every release ships with ISRC, UPC, and store-ready metadata. Flat per-release pricing means occasional creators are not subsidizing power users through annual fees.
DistroKid is fast for human-made releases and widely known. For Suno creators, the annual subscription hurts if you release sporadically, and there is no native Suno import — you export and upload manually. AI acceptance exists but provenance handling is not Suno-specific.
TuneCore charges per release per year on the entry plan. Economics work for steady release cadences but punish Suno creators who experiment with one-off tracks. No Suno tooling; manual upload only.
One-time fee, but higher upfront and 9% commission on some services.
Single
$9.95 once
Royalties
91% (Sync)
Suno extension
No
AI policy
Case-by-case
CD Baby's one-time single fee is closer to AIMD's model than subscription distributors, but the upfront cost is higher and sync licensing takes a commission. Suno creators still upload manually.
RouteNote's free tier trades 15% of royalties for zero upfront cost. Suno creators who expect streams should compare that rev-share against AIMD's $2 flat fee quickly.
Pros
Free distribution option
Wide store list on paid tier
Cons
15% royalty share on free tier
No Suno tooling
◉ Commentary
Why Suno creators should not default to the biggest name
DistroKid's brand recognition does not automatically make it the best distributor for Suno. Subscription economics punish low-volume AI creators. AIMD's per-release model aligns cost with output.
What "AI-friendly" actually means
Accepting an MP3 is not enough. Stores want accurate AI disclosure metadata. AIMD scans provenance before billing and attaches disclosure fields DSPs expect. That reduces rejection risk compared to manual uploads through generic distributors.
When to pick AIMD
You create on Suno, release sporadically or steadily, want Spotify plus other DSPs, and refuse rev-share. Install the extension, import, pay $2, done.
◉ FAQ
Can I distribute Suno music with DistroKid?
Yes, manually. Export from Suno and upload through DistroKid's dashboard. You will pay an annual subscription and handle metadata yourself. AIMD offers a Suno browser extension and per-release pricing instead.
What is the cheapest way to put Suno on Spotify?
Compare total cost over 12 months. A $2 one-time AIMD release beats a $24.99 annual subscription if you ship fewer than ~12 songs per year.
Does AIMD take a percentage of Suno royalties?
No. AIMD charges $2 per AI release once. You keep 100% of streaming royalties.