Start with theme and point of view
A useful lyrics prompt starts with the situation and the singer's point of view. Is the narrator confessing, remembering, celebrating, warning, or letting go?
Once that point of view is clear, the rest of the prompt can define imagery, emotional movement, and the chorus message.
Prompt examples
Theme-to-lyrics prompt
Write lyrics about leaving a small town at sunrise, first-person point of view, bittersweet but hopeful, concrete road imagery, simple memorable chorus hook
This gives Suno a story frame before asking for lyrical output.
Give the chorus one job
The chorus should usually carry the simplest emotional message. If the verse tells the story, the chorus can repeat the promise, regret, question, or release.
Avoid asking for too many chorus ideas at once. A focused hook is easier to remember and easier to regenerate.
Match lyrics to vocal delivery
Lyrics and performance should support each other. A whispered lyric works well with intimate vocals; an uplifting message needs more lift, brightness, or group energy.