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How Credits Work on Songer Max

Learn how Songer Max credits work: 60 monthly credits that refresh each cycle, top-ups that never expire, the order they're spent in, how Pro and Max credits stack, and what happens to your balance when you cancel.

Songer Max gives you 60 credits at the start of each billing cycle to create and unlock songs. Here's how the credit system works in detail.

Monthly Max Credits

You get 60 credits when your billing cycle starts. They reset with each renewal and don't roll over to the next cycle, so it's worth using them within the period.

Credit Top-ups

Credit top-ups are one-off purchases that you can use whenever. They never expire and stay in your account whether you have an active subscription or not.

As an active Max subscriber, you also get 20% off every credit top-up.

Same Balance, Different Rules

Both types of credits live in the same balance and can be used in the same way. The difference is what happens to them over time:

  • Max credits: refresh on renewal, don't roll over, expire if your subscription ends

  • Top-up credits: never expire, stay in your account permanently

Which Credits Are Spent First?

The system always protects credits that would otherwise expire, so spending happens in this order:

  1. Monthly Max credits with the earliest expiration date first

  2. Then any other expiring buckets, oldest first

  3. Non-expiring top-up credits last

That way, your subscription credits get used before they expire, and your top-up credits are saved safely until you actually need them.

What If I Have Songer Pro and Songer Max Together?

Your Pro and Max credits stack. You get 10 Pro credits and 60 Max credits per cycle, for 70 in total. Both refresh on their own schedule and don't roll over.

If you ever cancel Max, your 10 Pro credits stay with you as long as your Pro subscription is active.

What Happens to My Credits if I Cancel Max?

Your credit top-ups stay with you; they never expire. Your monthly Max credits expire at the end of your current paid period, since they're tied to active billing cycles.

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