About Song Name Generator
Song Name Generator suggests evocative, marketable titles that fit your genre and song theme. Use it when the song is written but the title isn't, or when you're shaping the title before you write so the song has a name to lean into.
Who this tool is for
- Songwriters who finished the lyrics but can't name the track
- Producers naming instrumentals or beats for marketplaces and streaming
- Worship leaders titling original songs for set lists and recordings
- Indie artists naming tracks for an album with cohesive theme and naming style
- Film and game composers titling score tracks before delivery
Real use cases
- Title a song you wrote about leaving your hometown without using "home"
- Name 12 instrumentals for a lo-fi beat pack listing
- Pick a worship song title that fits a Sunday morning set list
- Brand a 10-track indie album where titles share a stylistic pattern
- Name a score cue that has to communicate mood from the title alone
How to use Song Name Generator
- Enter the genre and the actual subject or feeling of the song
- Mention if titles should follow an album pattern (all one word, all questions, all places)
- Pick title type: phrase, question, single word, name, lyric-from-the-song
- Ask for 20+ then narrow — title hunting is volume-driven
- Use Spotify and Apple Music to check if your top picks already belong to famous tracks
Tips for better results
- A great title is concrete and a little surprising. "Blue Pickup" beats "Sad Drive"
- The title doesn't have to appear in the lyrics, but if it does, fans find the song faster
- For streaming, shorter titles render better on phone screens — under 25 characters
- Check that the title doesn't belong to a huge hit. You won't outrank Adele's "Hello"
Frequently asked questions
Can two songs share a title?
Yes — titles aren't copyrightable. But sharing a title with a famous song means your version may get buried in search. Pick titles that haven't been used by a major hit.
Should the title appear in the lyrics?
Often, but not always. Pop and country songs usually repeat the title in the chorus. Indie and experimental tracks more often use a title that hints at the song without being inside it.
How long should a song title be?
One to four words is standard. Long titles work for ironic or descriptive purposes (Fall Out Boy, Panic! at the Disco) but lose on small streaming screens.