How to Master a Whole Suno Album at Once (20+ Tracks, Same Loudness, No DAW)

By TrackGleam · Published July 14, 2026 · 7 min read

You can master an entire Suno album in one pass, in your browser, with nothing uploaded: drop every WAV into TrackGleam's bulk queue, preview one track free, and any one-time credit purchase — from $1.99 — unlocks "Master all" forever. Every track comes out at a verified −14 LUFS integrated / −1.0 dBTP true peak, so the album plays at one consistent loudness instead of lurching between songs. No DAW, no account, no subscription.

Why does every mastering guide assume you only have one song?

Search "how to master a Suno song" and you'll find plenty of answers — including ours. Search "how to master a whole album at once" and the results collapse into decade-old DAW forum threads and single-track tools wearing an album costume. The reason is commercial, not technical: batch mastering is easy to build and hard to sell without a subscription, so almost nobody sells it any other way.

Meanwhile the actual workflow for a finished Suno album is grim. Free tools like Audacity and BandLab process one file at a time — import, process, export, repeat — so a 20-track album means running the same ritual 20 times and hoping your settings, your ears, and your patience stay consistent from track 1 to track 20. They won't. That inconsistency is the exact thing album mastering exists to prevent.

Why isn't an album just 20 single masters?

Because the tracks have to agree with each other. We measured 12 AI-generated exports in July 2026: median −15.2 LUFS integrated, with a spread from −16.4 all the way up to −12.3 — over 4 dB of drift between generations from the same tools, with 8 of 12 below the −14 LUFS streaming level and 3 of 12 over the −1.0 dBTP true-peak ceiling. Master those independently, by hand, on different days, and track 3 will still jump out of track 4 on the finished album.

Album cohesion is measurable, and it comes down to three things: the same integrated loudness target on every track (−14 LUFS for streaming — Spotify's own guidance, and the full platform table is in our streaming targets guide), the same true-peak ceiling (−1.0 dBTP so lossy encoding doesn't clip), and compatible tonal balance — not identical EQ, since a ballad and a banger shouldn't get the same curve, but no track that sounds like it wandered in from a different record.

There's a fourth album-only job: sequencing. Track order lives or dies on tempo and key relationships, which is why the analysis card on every mastered track reports BPM and musical key with its Camelot code — more on that in the walkthrough below.

How we measured

12 AI-generated exports, ITU-R BS.1770-4 gated loudness + dBTP true peak, measured client-side in the TrackGleam engine, July 2026.

What are your real options for mastering an album, honestly priced?

Three routes, and the right one depends on the release. A human mastering engineer typically charges $50–150 per track at independent professional rates, with bulk discounts common on EPs and albums (as of 2026) — and for a vinyl pressing or a label release, a human is genuinely the right call. A batch algorithm will not beat an experienced engineer's judgment on a record that justifies the budget, and we'd rather tell you that than pretend otherwise.

The AI services do offer batch-friendly workflows, but behind recurring plans: LANDR sells mastering through its subscription tiers, and eMastered's unlimited plan runs $156 per year (both as of July 2026). Fine if you release constantly; expensive if you have one album and a $1.99 problem. Full comparisons live at TrackGleam vs LANDR and our alternatives page.

RouteCost for a 12-track albumBatch?When it's the right choice
Human mastering engineerAbout $600–1,800 at typical independent per-track rates, before the bulk discounts many engineers offer on albums (Soundplate, 2026)Yes — it's a personVinyl, label releases, records with revision budgets
Subscription AI (LANDR, eMastered)$156/yr at eMastered; LANDR via subscription tiersYes, while you keep payingHigh-volume artists releasing all year
Audacity / BandLabFreeNo — one file at a timeOne or two tracks and plenty of patience
TrackGleam bulk queueAny one-time credit (from $1.99) unlocks batch forever; free engine runs on every track at no per-track costYes — unlimited files per queueStreaming-first albums; audio never leaves your device

Verified July 2026 — we re-check competitor pricing quarterly.

How do you batch-master a whole Suno album in one pass?

1. Export WAVs from Suno. As of July 2026, Suno's help center limits WAV downloads to Pro and Premier plans; grab the WAV if your plan allows so you don't stack lossy on lossy. If MP3 is all you have, master it anyway and export the master as WAV. Name the files in track order — 01, 02, 03 — and your queue doubles as a tracklist.

2. Drop the entire folder into the TrackGleam queue. Every file stays on your machine — processing runs in your browser, and you can watch the network tab in devtools to confirm no audio leaves it. That matters more than usual here: this is an unreleased album.

3. Preview one track free. Pick your loudest and your quietest song, master one, and A/B it level-matched at streaming volume so louder can't masquerade as better. The 16 genre presets include quieter targets for ambient and lofi — an album of sleep beds shouldn't be slammed to −14.

4. Hit "Master all." Every track in the queue renders through the same engine with the same target — that's where the consistency comes from. The optional "Master all with AI" runs AI-Enhanced masters instead: per-track processing decisions, linear-phase finishing EQ, correlation-driven per-band stereo width, at one credit per track — with a full watermarked preview free before you pay for any of it.

5. Read the receipts. Every render is re-measured after processing — the LUFS and true-peak numbers in each track's report are what's actually in the file, not what the engine intended. An album where every report reads −14 LUFS / under −1.0 dBTP is, by definition, a consistent album.

6. Sequence with the analysis card. Each track's report includes BPM and key with its Camelot code. A simple rule of thumb for a tracklist that flows: move to a neighboring Camelot number or swap the letter, and avoid back-to-back jumps of more than 15–20 BPM unless the jolt is the point.

What does the bulk queue actually cost?

Here's the honest math. Mastering one track on TrackGleam is free, forever, no account. The bulk queue works differently: you drop all 20 files, preview one free, and any one-time credit purchase — starting at $1.99 — unlocks the queue permanently. Once it's unlocked, "Master all" runs the free engine on every track with no per-track cost: a 20-track album batch-mastered to a consistent −14 LUFS costs $1.99 total, once, ever. The AI-Enhanced route spends one credit per track ($1.99 for 1, $5 for 10, $20 for 100, or the $99 lifetime with a 50-per-month allowance) — so $5 covers ten AI masters and $20 covers a hundred. It's one-time, with no subscription and no account; codes arrive by email, work on any device, never expire, and carry a 14-day money-back guarantee (full pricing). And if $1.99 isn't worth it to you, the free single-track path still works — we just can't make you click 20 times for free and call it a feature.

Why do AI-generated albums need the AI Fix presets?

Suno's tonal quirks — metallic shimmer, brittle highs, mud piled into the 200–500 Hz band — are tolerable on one track and exhausting across forty minutes, because the same artifact recurs song after song. The free AI Fix presets are tuned for exactly this material, and applying one preset across the whole batch fixes the signature everywhere at once instead of track by track. If you're not sure which symptoms are fixable in mastering and which need a regeneration, the Suno triage guide walks through them one by one.

How do you QC the album before uploading to your distributor?

Five minutes, three free checks on the finished masters: run the release-ready grader for a pass/fail on each file, the loudness penalty checker to confirm no platform will turn anything up or down unexpectedly, and the true-peak checker to verify every track clears the −1.0 dBTP ceiling before lossy encoding gets its hands on it. One honest caveat before you upload: mastering fixes audio, not policy. If a distributor rejects an AI release over content or licensing rules, no loudness number saves it — that part is between you, your distributor's terms, and your licenses. And if some of your album's loudness questions are really "why is my track quiet on Spotify" questions, that has its own answer.

Drop your album in — first master is free, nothing uploads

FAQ

Can I master 30 or more tracks at once?

Yes. The bulk queue takes unlimited files in one batch. Once unlocked, "Master all" runs the free engine on every track with no per-track cost, however many you drop in.

Is bulk mastering free?

Not quite, and we say so plainly: single-track mastering is free and unlimited forever, while the bulk queue unlocks with any one-time credit purchase from $1.99 — once, permanently, no subscription. After that, batch-mastering an album with the free engine costs nothing per track.

What is the difference between "Master all" and "Master all with AI"?

"Master all" runs the free mastering engine on every queued track at no per-track cost once the queue is unlocked. "Master all with AI" renders AI-Enhanced masters instead — per-track processing decisions, linear-phase finishing EQ, correlation-driven per-band stereo width, post-render verification — at one credit per track.

Do I need an account to master an album?

No. There is never an account. Credit codes arrive by email after purchase, work on any device, never expire, and come with a 14-day money-back guarantee.

Does the bulk queue work for Udio or Riffusion albums?

Yes. The engine measures and masters the audio file itself, so exports from Udio, Riffusion, or any other generator work exactly like Suno tracks — including the AI Fix presets, which target the same family of generation artifacts.

Do my unreleased album files get uploaded?

No. All processing runs in your browser on your own device, and you can verify it yourself: open your browser's developer tools and watch the network tab — no audio ever leaves your machine.

What loudness should every album track hit for Spotify?

−14 LUFS integrated with a −1.0 dBTP true-peak ceiling, on every track. That matches the level Spotify normalizes toward (as of July 2026), and using one target across the album is what makes it play consistently from song to song.

Master a track free — no signup, nothing uploads

Includes the AI Fix presets for AI-generated tracks.

Keep reading