ElevenLabs launches ElevenMusic iOS app, taking on Suno and Udio on mobile

ElevenLabs has launched ElevenMusic, a standalone iOS app for AI music generation and discovery, bringing its Eleven Music platform — which debuted on the web last August — to mobile for the first time.

The app went live on the App Store on Wednesday (April 1), following several weeks during which it had been listed ahead of its formal release. Its arrival places ElevenLabs in more direct competition with Suno and Udio on mobile, both of which have established consumer app presences in the AI music generation market.

On the free tier, users can generate up to seven songs per day using natural language prompts, with options to control song length, whether the track includes lyrics, and the writing style. Songs created by other users can be discovered within the app and remixed via text prompts, with remixes counting toward a user’s daily generation limit.

The app includes a discovery layer built around curated stations and moods — among them Focus, Energy, Relax, Late Night, Cosmic, and Chill — alongside sections for top charts, trending content, and new releases, mirroring the layout of conventional streaming apps.

A Pro subscription tier is available at $9.99 per month, or $95.90 per year. Subscribers gain access to up to 500 tracks per month, more than 500 GB of storage, and expanded access to styles and moods.

The iOS app follows a series of moves by ElevenLabs to build out its music offering over the past eight months. MBW covered the launch of Eleven Music last August, when ElevenLabs unveiled the web-based platform alongside licensing agreements with Merlin — the independent labels’ digital licensing organization — and publisher Kobalt.

Unlike its two key competitors, ElevenLabs entered AI music generation with licensing deals in place from the outset; both Suno and Udio launched without them, drawing copyright litigation from the major record companies before subsequently reaching a series of label settlements.

Speaking at the time of the Eleven Music platform launch last August, Mati Staniszewski, CEO and co-founder of ElevenLabs, said: “As an AI audio company, expanding into music was a natural progression, and we are thrilled to introduce Eleven Music today. We’ve heard massive demand from our enterprise partners and users for a music model like this and we took our time to ship one that we’re certain they’ll love. We’re proud to do so in collaboration with music industry partners who recognize the vast benefits and possibilities of AI innovation in music.”

In January this year, the company released The Eleven Album — a collection of tracks spanning rap, pop, R&B, EDM, and cinematic scoring, produced with participating artists using the Eleven Music model. And last month, MBW reported that ElevenLabs had launched a Music Marketplace — a platform allowing creators to publish, license, and monetize songs generated on Eleven Music — at which point the company reported that nearly 14 million tracks had been created since its August debut.

“Our community has already created 14 million songs with Eleven Music,” Staniszewski said at the Music Marketplace launch. “The Music Marketplace gives every one of those artists and creators a way to publish and earn from their work. We’re expanding the model that’s paid out over $11 million to voice creators, and we think the earning potential for musicians is just as significant.”

In February 2026, ElevenLabs raised $500 million in a Series D funding round led by Sequoia Capital, valuing the London and New York-headquartered company at $11 billion — more than triple its valuation from a year prior — as previously covered by MBW.

“When we started ElevenLabs, we couldn’t have imagined the scale and impact we’ve reached today yet we stay hungry, knowing how early this space still is, as we build toward IPO and beyond,” Staniszewski said at the time of that raise.

ElevenLabs is currently hiring for a consumer music marketing role to grow the vertical.Music Business Worldwide