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The Best AI Singing Apps in 2025 — Tested and Ranked
A hands-on guide to the best AI singing apps of 2025, broken down by category: voice cloning apps, text-to-song apps, and karaoke apps. Pricing, who each one is for, and our picks.
December 1, 2025
The Best AI Singing Apps in 2025 — Tested and Ranked
AI singing apps have multiplied fast. Some clone your voice and let you sing any song. Some generate full songs from a text prompt. Some put a karaoke track in your hand and let AI do the rest.
They are not the same thing. And the right one for you depends entirely on what you want to do.
Here's a category-by-category breakdown of the apps actually worth using in 2025, with pricing, who each one is for, and our honest take.
Voice Cloning Apps (Sing Any Song in Your Voice)
These apps let you record a short sample of your voice, build a clone model, and use that model to "sing" any song you choose. The output sounds like you performing the track.
VibeSing — Best for personal AI covers with your own voice
What it does: Record three short prompts (about 30 seconds total), wait two minutes for the voice model to train, then sing any song from VibeSing's trending feeds — pulled from 10 global charts including the US, South Korea, Japan, Brazil, and Latin America.
Who it's for: People who want to hear themselves singing trending songs and share the result. The whole flow is designed for that use case — record, pick a song, share. No prompt engineering, no music theory knowledge.
Price: Free tier with limited generations. Pro plan at $9.99/month unlocks higher generation caps, longer clips, and Band Mode.
Our pick: Yes. VibeSing wins this category for one reason: the loop is tightest. You go from "I wonder what I'd sound like singing this" to a shareable clip in under five minutes. The voice model quality is on par with competitors, but the song selection (live chart feeds) and the share experience are clearly the focus.
Kits.ai
What it does: A voice conversion tool that started in the voice-over space and added singing conversion. Upload an audio file of someone singing, and the tool re-renders it in a different voice — either a stock voice or one you upload.
Who it's for: Creators who already have a vocal recording and want to swap the voice. Producers building demos.
Price: Free tier with limited conversions. Paid plans start at $9.99/month.
Our pick: Strong for its original use case (voice conversion), less convenient if you want the full record-to-share loop.
Musicfy
What it does: Voice cloning plus a cover generator. Similar workflow to VibeSing — record, pick a song, generate.
Who it's for: People who want voice cloning for both speaking and singing.
Price: Free tier with watermarks. Paid plans from $9.99/month.
Our pick: A reasonable alternative. VibeSing's edge is in the song library curation and the share card experience.
Text-to-Song Apps (Generate Full Songs from Prompts)
These apps generate original music from a text description. You describe the genre, mood, lyrics, and the AI produces a complete song — vocals included.
Suno
What it does: Type a prompt like "upbeat indie pop about a road trip" and Suno generates a full track with lyrics, vocals, and instrumentation. You can also upload lyrics and have Suno compose around them.
Who it's for: Songwriters who want a quick demo. Creators who need royalty-free music for videos. Anyone curious what AI songwriting actually looks like.
Price: Free tier with limited generations. Pro plan at $10/month unlocks more generations and commercial use rights.
Our pick: The leader in text-to-song quality as of late 2025. Output is genuinely listenable, and the ability to regenerate specific sections is underrated.
Udio
What it does: Similar to Suno — text prompt to full song. Udio's model leans slightly more toward vocal realism and tends to produce tracks with cleaner vocal separation.
Who it's for: Same audience as Suno. Worth trying both to see which aesthetic you prefer.
Price: Free tier available. Paid plans from $10/month.
Our pick: A real competitor to Suno. Udio's vocal quality is arguably better in some genres, but Suno's editing tools are more polished.
Karaoke Apps (Sing Live with Backing Tracks)
These are traditional karaoke apps with AI enhancements. You sing live, the app provides the backing track and often scores you, applies effects, or records the result.
Smule
What it does: The classic karaoke app. Sing live with professional backing tracks, optionally duet with other Smule users, get an auto-tuned recording.
Who it's for: People who want to actually sing (not have AI sing for them). Long-standing community of casual and serious karaoke users.
Price: Free tier with song limits. Smule Pro at $9.99/month unlocks the full catalog.
Our pick: Best-in-class for live karaoke. The social features and duet functionality are unmatched. Not a voice cloning tool — and not trying to be.
StarMaker
What it does: Karaoke with AI scoring, vocal effects, and a heavy social/community layer. More gamified than Smule.
Who it's for: Casual users who want a fun, social karaoke experience.
Price: Free with ads and in-app purchases. VIP subscription available.
Our pick: Fun if you like the gamified feel. Smule is the better choice for serious singers.
How to Choose
A few quick rules of thumb:
- You want to hear yourself singing trending songs: VibeSing. The whole product is built around this.
- You want to generate original music from a prompt: Suno or Udio. Try both.
- You want to actually sing live: Smule.
- You want to swap the voice on an existing recording: Kits.ai.
The categories will keep blurring — text-to-song apps are adding voice cloning, voice cloning apps are adding generative features. For now, the right tool depends on the job you have in mind.
Try VibeSing
If you want to skip the comparison and just hear yourself singing a song that's trending right now, open VibeSing Studio. Thirty seconds of recording, two minutes of training, and you're in.