Radio Commercial Maker
Create radio ads and radio jingles with AI. This page is built for advertisers, local businesses, and agencies that need fast campaign-ready audio for spots, promotions, and station-friendly brand recall.
Generate inside the page
This page is tuned for radio commercial maker. Sign in, use your 8 free credits, and generate 2 variations without leaving the page.
Checking your credits...
Tip: describe the audience, mood, and where the jingle will play. More context usually gives cleaner hooks.
What you get
- 2 jingle variations per run
- Downloadable MP3 outputs
- 8 credits consumed only when generation starts
Why radio ads need a different brief
A radio ad is not just background music. It has to carry recall, leave space for a spoken message, and move quickly enough to fit the format. That is why radio commercial search intent is different from general jingle or general music intent.
If your audience is a local business, you should brief the generator around the campaign promise. A store opening, a seasonal sale, a dealership event, or a service call-out all need different energy and pacing. The better the promise, the better the jingle brief.
How to make stronger commercial prompts
The best commercial prompts name the audience, the offer, and the emotional tone. A holiday sale, a sports-themed promo, and a furniture store campaign should not share the same brief. Mention the action you want the listener to take and the kind of recall you need.
If the spot will sit under a voice-over, ask for a cleaner arrangement. If the jingle itself should carry the message, ask for a short slogan or phrase that can repeat naturally and quickly.
Where this page fits in the cluster
This page should own commercial and ad-style jingle intent. It is narrower than the main generator page and more obviously purchase-oriented. That makes it valuable both for users and for search structure.
It also becomes the natural place to link supporting guides later, such as radio ad script creation, promo testing advice, or examples of short-form campaign audio.
Best fit and poor fit
This page is a strong fit when you need short branded audio that can be judged quickly: an intro, a sponsor hook, a local promo, a product launch cue, or a repeatable sound mark. The output is most useful when the brief includes one phrase, one audience, and one channel where the audio will be used.
It is a poor fit when you need a finished broadcast campaign with legal copy, talent direction, media trafficking, and compliance review already handled. It is also not meant to replace final mastering for a national campaign. Treat the generator as a fast creative draft and review the result inside the real placement before you publish.
Real brief examples
Podcast: Create a warm 12-second intro for an interview show about independent business owners. Leave space for a host voice-over and end with a small audio logo.
Local ad: Create a bright radio promo for a weekend furniture sale. Make the phrase "fresh rooms, better weekends" repeat once, with upbeat energy and a clean finish for a spoken call to action.
Brand cue: Create a polished sonic hook for a B2B software launch. It should feel confident, modern, and reusable across webinar intros, product videos, and short social clips.
Information the AI needs
Give the generator the product or show name, the phrase you want remembered, the audience, the emotional tone, and the channel. Those details matter more than naming a genre.
How to judge a result
Listen twice, then mute it for a minute and see what phrase or rhythm you still remember. A useful jingle survives that quick recall test and still leaves room for the message.
What to revise
If the first version feels generic, change the audience and placement before changing the style. "For a local HVAC radio spot" is more helpful than "make it more catchy."
Production checklist before you use it
This is the difference between a thin generator page and a useful decision page. The tool can create a draft quickly, but the page still needs to help a real buyer decide whether that draft is good enough for a podcast, a local campaign, a launch video, or a repeatable brand moment.
A better workflow than one-and-done generation
The best results usually come from a short review loop. Generate the first pair of variations, choose the one with the clearest memory cue, then rerun with one specific adjustment. Ask for a cleaner ending, less percussion, more room for voice-over, a warmer vocal tone, or a shorter hook. Small instructions produce more useful changes than replacing the whole brief.
Save the first usable direction before experimenting. Teams often lose time chasing novelty when they already have a version that fits the placement. If the jingle is for a podcast, drop it under the first 20 seconds of an episode. If it is for a radio spot, read the ad copy over it. If it is for a business launch, test it before the logo animation or product demo. That context exposes problems that are hard to hear on a standalone player.
This page is also intentionally linked to nearby pages instead of unrelated AI music topics. Someone searching for radio commercial maker needs help with short-form branded audio. They do not need a broad entertainment music hub, a lyric writer, or a full song generator. Keeping the page narrow makes it easier for users and search engines to understand why this page exists.
Keep a lightweight production note
When a jingle direction is close, write down the brief, the selected variation, the intended channel, and the reason you chose it. This takes less than a minute and prevents confusion later when a teammate asks why one version was used in a podcast intro while another was used in a campaign video.
A useful note includes the exact phrase, the target audience, the placement, and any edits still needed before publishing. For example: "Use variation two for the webinar intro because it has the cleanest ending. Reduce the opening percussion if we add narration." That kind of note turns a generated audio file into a managed brand asset.
This is especially important when a team buys more credits later. Without a record, every new run starts from scratch. With a clear note, you can make controlled revisions: shorter, warmer, more premium, less busy, better for voice-over, or closer to the existing brand sound.
Keep the note beside the downloaded audio, not buried in chat history. Search traffic may bring someone to this page once, but repeat usage depends on a workflow that feels organized after the first test.
Frequently asked questions
Can I create a radio ad jingle even if I am not an agency?
Yes. Local businesses, independent creators, and in-house marketing teams can all use this page for short branded promo audio.
Is this only for traditional radio?
No. The same style of short campaign audio often works for streaming ads, sponsor reads, and local digital promos too.
What should I include in the prompt?
Mention the offer, the audience, the brand tone, and whether a voice-over needs space in the final track.
Keep the cluster tight
Each supporting page should lead back to the generator and to a small set of closely related use-case pages. That is how this site stays focused and wins on one topic family instead of drifting into generic AI music content.