Udio is Suno's strongest rival — vocals that often feel closer to a real performer, cleaner instrumental separation, and a section-by-section editor. But Udio only gives you audio. This guide walks through the three proven ways to turn a Udio track into a finished music video for YouTube, TikTok, and Reels in 2026: the AI music video generator path (Solmi), the manual edit path (CapCut / Premiere), and the dance-template path (Freebeat / Plazmapunk).
Yes, on paid plans. Udio's Pro and Premier tiers grant commercial use of generated audio; Solmi Pro grants commercial use of the rendered video. With both you can monetize on YouTube, TikTok, and Spotify Canvas.
Udio's paid plans include a commercial-use license for music you generate. Free-tier downloads have been disabled across all tiers since the October 2025 Universal Music settlement — confirm Udio's current download policy before planning a release.
Solmi: 3–10 minutes from paste to export including all three aspect ratios. Manual edit in CapCut or Premiere: 1–3 hours. Freebeat or Plazmapunk: 5–15 minutes per aspect ratio.
Yes — Solmi auto-detects the lyrics from the Udio audio and renders them on screen in your chosen style. Freebeat also supports auto-lyrics. CapCut's auto-caption handles this in manual edits with strong accuracy in 2026.
No. Solmi requires zero editing skills — paste a Udio link (or upload the file if downloads are gated on your plan), pick a style, and generate. Freebeat and Plazmapunk are also no-editing. Only the manual CapCut or Premiere workflow requires editing experience.
Solmi imports Udio share links directly and auto-detects the lyrics, then renders a finished video in all three aspect ratios — no storyboard step required. Freebeat and Plazmapunk both work with WAV/MP3 uploads if your Udio plan still allows audio export.