YouTube has expanded its AI music tools with a new feature designed to help creators resolve Content ID copyright claims without deleting or re-uploading videos.

The company has quietly introduced a new “Create” button inside YouTube Studio’s existing “Replace Song” tool.

The feature allows creators to generate four AI-made royalty-free instrumental tracks that can replace copyrighted music directly inside a flagged video.

Once the replacement music is applied, the Content ID claim can reportedly be removed automatically, allowing creators to restore monetization more quickly.

Unlike older copyright claim tools that required muting audio, trimming sections, or re-editing videos manually, the new system works directly within YouTube Studio’s copyright resolution workflow.

Google said the goal is to help creators keep videos online while resolving music claims in only a few steps.

The tool is currently available only to desktop users in the United States through YouTube Studio, but wider global availability and mobile support is planned later in 2026.

The new feature is separate from YouTube’s earlier AI music system called Music Assistant, which launched in 2024 for creators in the YouTube Partner Program.

Music Assistant allows users to generate copyright-free background music using text prompts that describe mood, instruments, and video style.

That feature uses Google DeepMind’s Lyria AI model. YouTube has not officially confirmed which AI model powers the new Replace Song generation tool, though several reports suggest it may rely on technology connected to Google’s broader AI music systems.

🚨 YouTube just made Content ID claims a lot LESS scary

YouTube just quietly rolled out a new AI tool that lets creators replace copyrighted music with AI generated, royalty free instrumentals in one click. pic.twitter.com/1HcEdqxmaJ

— vidIQ (@vidIQ) May 12, 2026

The update could significantly affect creators because Content ID claims remain one of the biggest frustrations on the platform.

Claims can block monetization, redirect advertising revenue to copyright owners, or force creators to modify videos after publishing. The new feature has also raised concerns across parts of the music industry.

Some production music companies and licensing platforms believe AI-generated replacement tracks could reduce demand for traditional royalty-free music libraries and composers.

Industry observers have also pointed to broader concerns around AI training data, artist compensation, and the impact of generative music tools on licensing revenue connected to YouTube’s Content ID system.

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