Start with the relationship moment
Love song prompts work better when the emotional situation is specific. Say whether the singer is confessing, apologizing, remembering a first night together, asking for another chance, or saying goodbye.
That relationship moment gives Suno a lyric frame. Romantic alone is useful, but romantic plus a clear scene gives the verse and chorus something to develop.
Prompt examples
Romantic confession starter
Romantic pop ballad, first-person confession after a long night drive, warm smooth lead vocal, intimate verse detail, repeated chorus promise, polished heartfelt mix
This prompt names the scene, point of view, vocal tone, chorus job, and production finish in one compact starter.
Give the chorus a promise, question, or memory
A love song chorus needs one emotional anchor. It can repeat a promise, ask a question, return to a shared memory, or turn a regret into a simple line the listener can remember.
Avoid asking for romantic lyrics in general. A short hook instruction like repeated chorus promise or final-line memory cue gives the model a more useful target.
Prompt examples
Chorus hook starter
Warm romantic pop, close smooth vocal, chorus hook built around the line 'stay until the morning light', gentle build-up, soft final refrain
The hook line stays stable while the arrangement can add lift and variation around it.
Match romantic lyrics with the right vocal distance
Love songs usually need vocal distance control. Smooth, warm, intimate, close-miked, or breathy can make the lyric feel direct; powerful or layered vocals can make the final chorus feel bigger.
Test one vocal shift at a time. Keep the lyric idea fixed, then compare smooth lead vocal, breathy close vocal, or layered final chorus to see which version carries the emotion best.