Every single one of my Suno tracks was getting rejected by DistroKid.
I'd spent weeks crafting prompts, generating dozens of tracks with Suno v4 (now 5.5), and I thought some of them were genuinely good. Good enough to put on Spotify and Apple Music. Good enough to earn royalties.
But every time I uploaded to DistroKid, the same thing happened: "Your track has been flagged as AI-generated content and cannot be distributed."
I tried everything the Reddit threads suggested -- running tracks through Audacity, adding EQ, layering in some live instrumentation, even re-exporting at different sample rates. Nothing worked. The AI detection algorithms these distributors use are looking for something deeper than surface-level audio adjustments can fix.
That's when I found Undetectr.

The Undetectr homepage -- they claim to be the "world's first AI artifact removal engine." I was skeptical.
What Even Is "AI Artifact Removal"?
Here's what I didn't understand until I dug into this: AI music generators like Suno and Udio leave behind specific spectral fingerprints in the audio. These aren't things you can hear -- they're patterns in the frequency spectrum that detection algorithms are trained to spot.
Think of it like this: when you take a photo with your phone, the EXIF data tells anyone who looks that it came from an iPhone. AI music has a similar "signature" baked into the audio itself -- harsh frequency spikes, unnaturally perfect timing, and specific harmonic patterns that real instruments and human performers never produce.
Undetectr claims to target and remove exactly these artifacts. Not by degrading your audio or slapping a filter on it, but by identifying the specific spectral anomalies that trigger detection and neutralizing them while keeping the musical content intact.
I was honestly pretty skeptical. It sounded too good to be true.
My Test: 3 Suno Tracks Through Undetectr
I picked three tracks from my Suno library -- each had been rejected at least once by DistroKid:
- A lo-fi hip-hop instrumental
- A pop track with AI vocals
- An EDM drop with heavy synths
The process was dead simple: upload, wait about 30 seconds, download. That's it. No settings to tweak, no parameters to adjust. Their engine does everything automatically.
When I compared the before and after in my DAW, the waveforms looked nearly identical. But when I zoomed into the spectrogram? The difference was clear. The harsh, unnatural frequency spikes that AI generators leave behind were smoothed out. The timing had subtle micro-variations added -- the kind of imperfections that real musicians naturally create.
The Pricing -- What It Actually Costs

The pricing page -- Starter at $19 for 10 credits, or Lifetime at $39 (founder pricing, regularly $99).
This is where Undetectr surprised me. I was expecting some expensive monthly subscription, but they actually have a pretty straightforward model:
Starter Plan -- $19 (one-time)
- 10 track processing credits
- MP3, WAV, FLAC output
- AI artifact removal + metadata cleanup
- Limited prompt vault access (10%)
Lifetime Plan -- $39 (one-time, founder pricing)
- Unlimited track processing forever
- Everything in Starter, plus:
- FREE professional mastering for every platform
- Sound Match tool (recreate any song's sound)
- 100+ tested AI music prompts
- Earnings calculator
- Bulk Suno downloader
- All future features included
The regular price for Lifetime is $99, but they have a founder pricing deal at $39 right now. Honestly, $39 for unlimited processing with no subscription is a no-brainer if you're producing more than a couple tracks. Even the $19 Starter makes sense if you just want to test it with a few songs.
Both plans are one-time payments -- no monthly fees, no recurring charges. That's refreshing compared to the subscription-everything model most tools use.

Full pricing page showing the earnings calculator -- they estimate 50 tracks at 8K streams/month could earn ~$2,280/month.
Pricing confidence: 95%. These prices are pulled directly from undetectr.com/pricing as of May 2026. The founder pricing ($39) has a countdown timer, so it may increase to the regular $99 at some point.
The Results -- Did It Actually Work?
Here's the part you're waiting for.
I processed all three tracks and uploaded them to DistroKid the same day. All three were accepted within 48 hours.
Let me say that again: tracks that had been rejected multiple times before -- same exact songs, same metadata -- went through without a single flag after processing with Undetectr.
I've since processed about 15 more tracks and every single one has been accepted. Zero rejections. The tracks are now live on Spotify, Apple Music, YouTube Music, Amazon Music, and Tidal.
The Extras That Actually Matter
Platform-Specific Mastering (Included Free)

The mastering page -- choose your target platform and they'll optimize to the exact LUFS standard.
This was an unexpected bonus. Every streaming platform has different loudness standards -- Spotify uses -14 LUFS, Apple Music uses -16 LUFS, Amazon requires a stricter -2 dBTP true peak limit. Undetectr masters your track to the exact spec for whichever platform you're targeting.
I've been paying $5-10 per track for mastering through LANDR. Having it included free with every processed track is genuinely valuable.
They support: Spotify, Apple Music, YouTube Music, Tidal, SoundCloud, Amazon Music, Deezer, TikTok, Instagram, Facebook, and Bandcamp. Each with the correct LUFS target.
Bulk Suno Downloader

The bulk download tool -- paste a Suno playlist URL and download everything as a ZIP.
If you're generating tracks on Suno, you know the pain of downloading them one by one. Undetectr built a free bulk downloader -- paste your Suno playlist or profile URL, select the tracks you want (or grab them all), and download as a ZIP.
It runs entirely in your browser, no login required, and downloads directly from Suno's CDN. It's included free with the Lifetime plan and honestly it should be a standalone product.
Sound Match (Lifetime Exclusive)
This one's clever. Enter any song name and artist, and their AI analyzes the genre, tempo, key, mood, instrumentation, and production style. It then generates ready-to-use prompts for Suno, Udio, and ElevenLabs that will recreate that song's sound (not copy the song -- recreate the production style).
I tested it with "Blinding Lights" by The Weeknd and got a detailed Suno prompt that nailed the 80s synth-pop production style. The generated track sounded like it could've been on the same album.
What I Don't Love
Let's be honest -- it's not all perfect:
- No mobile app. Everything is browser-based. Not a dealbreaker, but an app would be nice.
- The countdown timer on founder pricing feels pushy. Classic marketing tactic. The price may or may not actually go up.
- You're still producing AI music. Undetectr makes it undetectable, but the ethical questions around AI-generated music on streaming platforms are still evolving. Distributors might update their detection methods.
- No API for batch automation. If you're processing 100+ tracks, you still have to upload them one at a time through the browser. An API would be a game changer for power users.
Who This Is Actually For
- Suno/Udio creators who want to monetize their AI-generated tracks through legitimate distribution channels
- Producers who use AI as part of their workflow and need their tracks to pass platform checks
- Anyone who's been rejected by DistroKid, CD Baby, Ditto, or other distributors due to AI detection
- Music entrepreneurs building catalogs of AI-generated tracks for royalty income
If you're making AI music for fun and posting it on SoundCloud, you probably don't need this. But if you want your AI tracks on Spotify and earning royalties, this is currently the only tool I've found that actually works.
Bottom Line
I went into Undetectr genuinely skeptical. "AI artifact removal" sounded like snake oil -- just another tool promising to solve a problem that's fundamentally unsolvable.
But 15 tracks processed, 15 tracks accepted, zero rejections. That's hard to argue with.
At $39 for lifetime unlimited processing -- including mastering, the bulk downloader, and all future updates -- it's paid for itself many times over with just my first month of streaming royalties.
If you're tired of the rejection emails from DistroKid, Undetectr is worth trying. Start with the $19 Starter if you want to test it, or grab the Lifetime at $39 while the founder pricing is still available.
Disclaimer: This is an independent review. I paid for my own Lifetime plan and was not compensated for this article. Your results may vary depending on your tracks and distribution platform.













