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YouTube creators hit by music copyright claims can now replace tracks with AI – at the touch of a button

GenevaTimes by GenevaTimes
May 4, 2026
in Business
Reading Time: 3 mins read
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YouTube creators hit by music copyright claims can now replace tracks with AI – at the touch of a button
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YouTube is now letting creators generate AI-produced instrumental tracks to replace copyrighted audio in their videos — positioning the tool as a way to resolve Content ID claims without removing content from the platform.

The update, announced via YouTube’s Creator Insider channel on Friday (May 1), adds a new “Create” button to the existing “Replace Song” tool in YouTube Studio on desktop.

Rene Ritchie, presenting the update on YouTube’s Creator Insider channel, said: “The Replace Song tool in YouTube Studio Desktop will now include a new Create button. Hit it and YouTube will generate four royalty-free instrumental tracks that you can use to replace copyrighted audio in your videos and release Content ID claims.”

The feature is currently limited to US desktop users of YouTube Studio. A global launch and rollout to Studio mobile are planned for later this year, according to Ritchie.

Rather than having to remove or re-edit videos that have triggered copyright claims, creators will now have the option to swap out the offending audio for an AI-generated, royalty-free alternative — keeping the video live and potentially restoring its ability to be monetized.

“The Replace Song tool in YouTube Studio Desktop will now include a new Create button. Hit it and YouTube will generate four royalty-free instrumental tracks that you can use to replace copyrighted audio in your videos and release Content ID claims.”

Rene Ritchie, YouTube

The tool is distinct from the “Music Assistant” feature that YouTube launched in April last year, which allows YouTube Partner Program members to generate copyright-free instrumental backing tracks via text prompts through the platform’s Creator Music marketplace.

That tool, which is powered by Google DeepMind’s Lyria model, enables creators to describe the music they want by specifying mood, instruments, and video context.

The new “Replace Song” update, by contrast, is specifically designed for videos that have already been flagged with a Content ID claim, generating replacement tracks directly within the claims resolution workflow.

YouTube has not specified which AI model powers the new instrumental generation feature, nor has it confirmed whether the tool uses the same underlying Lyria technology that drives the Music Assistant and Dream Track tools.

The launch is the latest step in a broader push by YouTube to integrate AI-generated music into its creator tools. In February, Google launched Lyria 3 — its most advanced AI music generation model to date — in the Gemini app, with integration into YouTube’s Dream Track tool for Shorts creators.

Last September, YouTube rolled out a Speech to Song tool that converts dialogue from existing videos into musical soundtracks, powered by Lyria 2.

The expansion of free, AI-generated music within YouTube Studio has implications for the production music sector.

Companies like Epidemic Sound, which has built a business providing licensed music to content creators, have historically positioned themselves as the solution to the copyright headaches that YouTube’s new tool now aims to resolve with AI.

YouTube’s subscription business — spanning YouTube Music, YouTube Premium, YouTube TV and NFL Sunday Ticket — is now generating approximately $20 billion annually.

The platform said in its most recent quarterly earnings that YouTube Music and Premium saw their largest quarterly increase in non-trial subscribers since the service launched in 2018.Music Business Worldwide

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