Skip to content
reference · 11 min read

Suno AI Prompt Library 2026: Copy-Paste Prompts for 40+ Genres

The complete Suno AI prompt library: copy-paste JSON prompts for 40+ genres organized by universe — funk, hardstyle, reggaetón, world sounds, Andean.

Suno AI prompt quality depends far more on structure than on inspiration. This page is the map for the entire VORAX prompt library: every genre-specific guide organized by sound universe, with one copy-paste JSON prompt per universe so you can hear the difference before committing to a deep dive. If this is your first time writing a Suno prompt, start with the 17-field prompt structure — everything below assumes you understand the JSON anatomy (style, kick, bass, perc, vox, atmosphere, arrangement) that separates a 9/10 Suno v5.5 track from a generic one.

Brazilian Funk: the densest genre on Suno

Brazilian funk is arguably the hardest genre family on Suno because it isn't one sound — it's a cluster of regional dialects that share a sub-808 skeleton and diverge everywhere else. Funk automotivo and montagem push a distorted, phonk-tinged low end built for car-audio systems; classic funk carioca keeps the original Rio favela groove with tamborim-driven percussion and call-and-response vocals; anime funk and ererê funk graft the same rhythmic chassis onto anime-vocal sampling and playful, syllable-dense hooks; drift phonk strips the vocals for a menacing, cowbell-and-808 instrumental; and Jersey club imports the bed-squeak triplet bounce from the US scene into the same 130-150 BPM pocket. Each variant needs its own kick anatomy and cultural anchor field or Suno defaults to a generic Latin-pop hybrid.

Explore the full funk class: Funk Automotivo, Classic Funk Carioca, Anime Funk, ErerĂŞ Funk, Drift Phonk, Montagem, Brazilian Funk overview, Jersey Club, and Phonk.

Copy-paste starting point — funk automotivo montagem:

{
  "style": "brazilian funk-phonk omega, funk automotivo montagem 2024-2026",
  "length": "90 seconds",
  "bpm": 130,
  "drop": "bar 1 beat 1",
  "key": "F minor",
  "kick": "sub boom kick deep round belly no tail, full energy bar 1, never stops, kick is floor",
  "bass": "808 sub A1 55Hz constant, glides between kick hits",
  "perc": "rimshot triplets, off-beat woodblock, hi-hat 16ths swung",
  "anch": "favela paulista 2024, montagem omega scene",
  "vox": "MC chops pitched down 4 semitones, slap-back delay 80ms",
  "atmosphere": "nocturnal humid, sub-bass cabin pressure",
  "melody": "metallic phonk cowbell loop, distorted bit-crushed",
  "arrangement": "intro 4 bars, drop bar 1, beat-switch bar 16, outro tag bar 28",
  "mix": "sub-heavy LUFS -8, kick clips to ceiling, vocals dry"
}

Hardstyle: euphoric versus dark, gregorian to viking

Hardstyle splits along one axis — euphoric versus dark — and a second axis of cultural costume. Euphoric hardstyle wants major-key saw leads and anthemic reverse-bass builds; rawstyle and dark hardstyle strip the melody for distorted screech leads and a punishing kick; gregorian hardstyle layers Latin chant samples over the kick for a cathedral-scale drop; viking hardstyle does the same with war-horn and percussion imagery instead of chant; melodic hardstyle dials the aggression down for a more emotional, vocal-forward build; anime hardstyle borrows J-pop chord progressions; raw hardstyle maximizes distortion over melody; and uptempo hardstyle pushes past 150 BPM into a harder, faster pocket. All of them share the four-stage kick anatomy (click, body, tail, sub) — only the melodic dressing changes.

Explore the full hardstyle class: Gregorian Hardstyle, Rawstyle / Dark, Viking Hardstyle, Euphoric Hardstyle, Melodic Hardstyle, Anime Hardstyle, Raw Hardstyle, Uptempo Hardstyle, and the Hardstyle overview guide.

Copy-paste starting point — euphoric hardstyle:

{
  "style": "euphoric hardstyle 2024, festival mainstage energy",
  "length": "90 seconds",
  "bpm": 150,
  "drop": "bar 17",
  "key": "A minor",
  "kick": "sharp 3kHz reverse-bass click, punchy 90Hz body, 400ms distorted tail, sub layer glued to kick",
  "bass": "reverse bass rolling into every kick, no separate 808",
  "perc": "four-on-the-floor hats, crash on drop, snare roll into breakdown",
  "melody": "major key saw lead, anthemic, wide stereo supersaw stack",
  "vox": "no lead vocals, wordless choir stab on drop",
  "atmosphere": "festival mainstage, wide reverb, crowd energy",
  "arrangement": "intro 8 bars, build 8 bars, drop bar 17, breakdown bar 33, second drop bar 49",
  "mix": "kick-forward LUFS -7, wide stereo lead, controlled sub"
}

ReggaetĂłn & Latin Urban: perreo to corridos tumbados

Reggaetón and its Latin urban siblings cover the widest emotional range in the library. Perreo keeps the classic dembow riddim built for the club; melodic reggaetón and reggaetón romántico slow the tempo and add sung, R&B-influenced hooks; reggaetón fusion blends the riddim with house, Afrobeats, or trap elements; dembow dominicano speeds the same riddim into a rawer, more percussive Dominican variant; neoperreo strips production down to a lo-fi, DIY aesthetic; latin trap and mambo urbano lean into 808-heavy, half-time trap drums with Spanish flow; and corridos tumbados fuses Mexican corrido storytelling with trap 808s and requinto guitar. If you're not sure which sub-genre fits your idea, the reggaetón sub-genres explained reference maps all of them by BPM, mood, and drum pattern.

Explore the full reggaetón class: Melodic Reggaetón, Perreo, Reggaetón Fusion, Corridos Tumbados, Dembow Dominicano, Neoperreo, Latin Trap, Mambo Urbano, Reggaetón Romántico, the Reggaetón overview, and Reggaetón sub-genres explained.

Copy-paste starting point — perreo:

{
  "style": "perreo classic dembow riddim 2024, club-ready",
  "length": "2 minutes",
  "bpm": 94,
  "drop": "bar 1",
  "key": "F# minor",
  "kick": "punchy dembow kick, tight 60ms body, no long tail",
  "perc": "classic dembow riddim pattern, dembow snare on the offbeat, tambora accents",
  "bass": "sub bass following the dembow pattern, 808 slides between chord tones",
  "vox": "female Spanish Caribbean accent, sung verses, rap-sung chorus",
  "atmosphere": "late-night club, warm analog saturation",
  "melody": "reggaeton piano stab, minor key, syncopated",
  "arrangement": "intro 4 bars, verse 16 bars, chorus 8 bars, bridge 8 bars, outro 8 bars",
  "mix": "dembow-forward LUFS -8, vocals sit upfront, warm low end"
}

Global Sounds: Afrobeats, amapiano, UK drill, and beyond

Beyond funk, hardstyle, and reggaetĂłn, VORAX covers the global sounds pushing streaming charts outside the US/UK mainstream. Afrobeats and amapiano share West/South African log-drum and shaker DNA but diverge in tempo and swing; afro house sits between the two with a four-on-the-floor club pulse; UK drill brings sliding 808s and triplet hi-hats from London's sound; hyperpop pushes distortion and pitch manipulation to the extreme; turkish trap and bhangra trap graft regional instrumentation (saz, dhol) onto trap 808 patterns; kuduro keeps the fast, percussive Angolan dance-floor energy; and afropiano fuses amapiano's log drum with Afrobeats melodic sensibility. The global sounds overview is the fastest way to compare all ten side by side.

Explore the full world class: UK Drill, Amapiano, Afrobeats, Hyperpop, Afro House, Turkish Trap, Kuduro, Bhangra Trap, Afropiano, and the Global Sounds overview.

Copy-paste starting point — amapiano:

{
  "style": "amapiano 2024, log drum driven, South African house",
  "length": "2 minutes 30 seconds",
  "bpm": 113,
  "drop": "bar 9",
  "key": "C minor",
  "kick": "soft rounded four-on-the-floor kick, 120ms body, no aggressive click",
  "bass": "log drum bass, deep pitched percussive slides, defines the low end",
  "perc": "shaker 16ths, rim clicks, woodblock, soft hi-hat swing",
  "melody": "jazzy piano chords, minor key, sparse and airy",
  "vox": "soft ad-libs, call-and-response chant, no lead melody",
  "atmosphere": "warm outdoor gathering, spacious, sunset energy",
  "arrangement": "intro 8 bars, log drum enters bar 9, build bar 24, breakdown bar 40",
  "mix": "log-drum forward LUFS -9, airy top end, warm mid-range"
}

Andean Electronic: tech andino to guaracha andina

The Andean electronic universe is VORAX's youngest and fastest-growing class, built on the fusion scene coming out of Peru, Bolivia, and Ecuador. Tech andino blends huayno melodic phrasing with techno four-on-the-floor drums; electrocumbia keeps cumbia's güira-and-guiro groove but adds electronic bass and synth stabs; trap andino layers Andean flute and charango samples over half-time trap 808s; guaracha andina fuses the guaracha tribal-house bounce (fast, percussive, breakdown-heavy) with Andean melodic hooks; and Andean house keeps a straight house pulse under the same regional instrumentation. All five need explicit instrument tokens (charango, quena, zampoña) in the melody field or Suno defaults to generic pan-flute clichés.

Explore the full Andean class: Tech Andino, Electrocumbia, Trap Andino, Guaracha Andina, and Andean House.

Copy-paste starting point — tech andino:

{
  "style": "tech andino 2024, huayno fusion techno",
  "length": "2 minutes",
  "bpm": 128,
  "drop": "bar 1",
  "key": "D minor",
  "kick": "straight four-on-the-floor techno kick, 80ms body, tight tail",
  "bass": "rolling techno sub bass, syncopated 16th pattern",
  "perc": "shaker, congas, quena flute rhythmic stabs",
  "melody": "charango arpeggio, huayno-derived melodic phrase, minor key",
  "vox": "wordless quechua-inspired vocal chant, sparse",
  "atmosphere": "high-altitude open air, cold reverb, wide stereo",
  "arrangement": "intro 4 bars, drop bar 1, breakdown bar 32, second drop bar 48",
  "mix": "kick-driven LUFS -8, melodic elements sit mid, sub controlled"
}

Prompt fundamentals every genre shares

Every universe above sits on the same skeleton: a JSON object with style, bpm, key, kick, bass, perc, vox, atmosphere, melody, arrangement, and mix fields. Read the 17-field prompt structure once and you can apply it to any genre in this library, not just the ones with a dedicated guide.

Char budget. Suno's style field silently truncates past 1000 characters. Target 750-1000 characters total — enough room for 12-17 fields with real detail, not so much that Suno cuts your arrangement or mix field mid-word. If you're pasting a JSON template plus custom edits, count characters before you submit.

Common mistakes. The same failure modes break prompts across every genre: vague kick descriptions ("hard kick" instead of the four-stage attack/body/tail/sub anatomy), stacking three or more genres into one style field (each addition roughly halves fidelity), missing the cultural anchor field (leaves regional dialect ambiguous), plain text instead of JSON (roughly half the genre fidelity in blind tests), and skipping negative prompts entirely. The full breakdown lives in 7 mistakes that break most prompts and the 3-layer negative prompt system. For the state-of-the-art context on why Suno v5.5's parser rewards this structure, see Suno v5 prompt engineering and prompts that don't get blocked.

Generate your prompt now

Reading the theory is step one. The fastest way to internalize the 17-field structure is to generate 10-20 prompts across two or three universes and compare the outputs side by side. Open the VORAX prompt generator to build a genre-accurate JSON prompt in under 30 seconds, or head to the free lyrics generator to pair it with genre-aware lyrics — funk montagem in Portuguese, reggaetón in Spanish, hardstyle in English, all with correct section markers Suno respects. Every universe in this library is free to try; Pro unlocks unlimited generation, batch variations, and the full negative-prompt Exclude field.

RELATED

LÂMINA FRIA
LÂMINA FRIA
BRAZILIAN FUNK · MONTAGEM OMEGA
0:000:00
🔊
Suno AI Prompt Library 2026: Copy-Paste Prompts for 40+ Genres · VORAX