Boomy
by Boomy
Create, customize, and monetize AI-generated songs in seconds
About
Boomy is a generative music platform that empowers anyone to create original songs with AI, regardless of musical background. Through a simple web interface, users pick a genre or mood and Boomy’s algorithms compose a unique track in seconds, which can then be edited or saved. Boomy is popular for making background music, beats, or even full songs – over 17 million AI-generated songs have been created on the platform. Uniquely, Boomy lets users distribute their tracks to 40+ streaming services and earn royalties when people listen. A free account (with sign-up) provides basic functionality for personal use, while subscriptions unlock higher output and commercial rights. Pricing: Free Tier: $0 – Create and save songs with limited capabilities (up to 25 song saves and 1 public “release” for streaming). Free users can experiment with Boomy’s core features, but audio file downloads and extensive commercial use are not included. Creator Plan: $9.99/month (core pricing, sometimes displayed as $14.99 with promotional discount applied) – Allows up to 500 song saves and 10 MP3 downloads per month. This tier includes faster content review for releases and permits using generated music in personal content like social media or livestreams (non-commercial monetization). Pro Plan: $29.99/month (or ~$29.99/month billed annually) – Offers unlimited song saves and around 25 WAV/MP3 downloads monthly. Pro users get broader usage rights, allowing commercial use of their music in podcasts, videos, and digital ads, plus priority support and faster generation processing. (Boomy’s paid plans also automatically include necessary licenses for the permitted use cases of each tier.)
What you can do with it
- Create background music beds for YouTube videos, TikToks, and other short-form content
- Generate and release full tracks to Spotify and Apple Music to earn streaming royalties
- Produce custom beats and instrumentals for podcasts, livestreams, or indie games
- Quickly prototype song ideas, arrangements, and moods for artists or producers
- Add AI-generated vocal lines and lyrics to instrumentals for demo songs or content
Pricing
Unconfirmed
How to access
Boomy is accessed via a web interface at boomy.com, with open self-serve signup and login required to create, save, and distribute songs. Users work entirely in the browser on desktop or mobile; there are no official standalone mobile or desktop apps mentioned. Distribution to streaming platforms is handled through Boomy’s built-in publishing pipeline, and there is no public API or developer integration surface advertised.
Access via web browser at boomy.com; users must sign up for an account and sign in (email-based account) to create and save songs; platform is web-only with no standalone mobile apps mentioned; open self-serve signup with no waitlist, API, or enterprise-only gate disclosed.
Tips for getting the best results
1) Sign up or log in at boomy.com, then click the “Create” button and choose to create a song to start a new project. 2) Select a musical style or genre (e.g., Electronic Dance, Lo-Fi, Rap Beats) and let Boomy generate a full track in a few seconds. 3) Use the editing tools to tweak instruments, tempo, structure, mixing, and effects until the track matches your desired mood or use case. 4) Optionally add vocals by either recording your voice, uploading an audio file, or using the Auto Vocal feature to turn typed lyrics into an AI-generated vocal performance that fits the song. 5) Save iterations as you go, then, when satisfied, use Boomy’s distribution tools to submit the track to streaming platforms like Spotify, Apple Music, and YouTube, following the prompts to finalize metadata, release settings, and monetization. 6) For content creators, export downloads (subject to plan limits) and test how the track sounds under dialogue or visuals before publishing to ensure levels and arrangement work in context.
Known limitations
The free tier has tight limits on song saves, releases, and downloads, which can constrain heavy users and may require upgrading for consistent publishing or higher-quality exports. Advanced features such as larger download quotas, higher release caps, and broader commercial-use permissions for content (e.g., in ads or extensive social media use) are tied to paid plans, adding recurring subscription cost for professionals. Boomy’s stylistic palette, while broad, is still constrained to the genres and presets it supports, so users seeking highly specific production styles or complex arrangements may find the results somewhat generic or needing external post-production. As a proprietary platform, Boomy does not expose fine-grained control over the underlying models or training process, and there is limited transparency about training data sources, which may concern users who need detailed licensing provenance. Performance and experience depend on internet connectivity and browser compatibility, and there are no native apps or offline workflows for users who prefer traditional DAW-based environments.
Model / Technology
Proprietary generative music models with AI-assisted vocal synthesis
Commercial use
Boomy states that users can share songs and monetize them with full commercial rights when releasing to major streaming platforms, earning royalties from streams while retaining rights to their original tracks. External overviews note that Boomy supports non-commercial and commercial usage scenarios, with broader commercial use options (for example in podcasts, social media, and advertising) tied to higher-tier subscriptions. Users should review Boomy’s Terms of Use and individual plan details for specific licensing conditions, content restrictions, and any differences between free and paid tiers.
Training data
Publicly available information does not detail Boomy’s exact training datasets; it describes the system generically as an AI engine that generates original music in various styles using proprietary models. Documentation and reviews do not specify whether training data comes from licensed catalogs, commissioned recordings, public-domain material, or web-scale scraping, nor do they outline any major publicly reported controversies about the training corpus. As with many generative audio systems, Boomy focuses its messaging on user-facing rights (full commercial rights for user outputs) rather than on disclosing underlying training data sources.