Best Audio Interfaces
Under $300
Your audio interface is the most important piece of hardware in any home studio. It determines your latency, your headroom, and the quality of everything you record. These five earn their spot on your desk — each under the $300 mark.
Read Full Article with Reviews & Videos →★ Top Pick
Focusrite Scarlett Solo (4th Gen)
The Scarlett Solo is the most popular beginner interface on the planet for a reason. The 4th gen upgrade brings improved preamps, Air mode for a brighter high-end, and 24-bit/192kHz conversion — all at around $120. If you record vocals or one instrument at a time, this is the no-brainer buy.
Why it made the list
We picked the Scarlett Solo because it removes every excuse not to start recording. The 4th gen preamps are genuinely good — not "good for the price," just good. Air mode adds a subtle high-frequency lift that flatters vocals without sounding hyped. The included plugin bundle (Ableton Live Lite, Hitmaker Expansion) means you can go from unboxing to recording a finished track in the same afternoon. For anyone who records one source at a time — voice, guitar, synth — there's no reason to spend more.
Best 2-Input Value
Focusrite Scarlett 2i2 (4th Gen)
The step up from the Solo — two mic/line inputs, MIDI I/O on the 4th gen, and the same improved preamp quality. If you ever record two sources simultaneously (guitar + vocals, duo session, a stereo room mic), this is the right call. Around $180 and worth every cent.
Why it made the list
The 2i2 is the sweet spot in Focusrite's lineup. The moment you want to record guitar and vocals at the same time — or run a stereo mic pair on an acoustic instrument — the Solo hits a wall. The 2i2 gives you two independent preamps with separate gain control, and the 4th gen added MIDI I/O which means you can plug in a keyboard controller without needing a separate MIDI interface. That combo of flexibility and reliability at $180 is hard to beat. If there's any chance you'll outgrow a single input, start here and save yourself the upgrade cost later.
Pro Sound on a Budget
SSL 2
Solid State Logic making a $150 interface sounds ridiculous until you hear the preamps. The SSL 2 has two channels of SSL's Legacy 4K transformer-style preamps built in — punch a button and it adds that famous SSL character. Exceptional value from a legendary name.
Why it made the list
SSL consoles run $50K–$500K. The SSL 2 puts their preamp DNA into a $150 box — and it's not just marketing. The 4K Legacy mode genuinely adds harmonic character to recordings: a subtle mid-range punch and top-end shimmer that sounds expensive. We include it here because if you care about the tone of your recordings (not just the specs), the SSL 2 delivers something the Focusrite lineup doesn't: flavor. It's the right pick for anyone who values character over clinical transparency.
Best for Live Performers
MOTU M2
MOTU makes interfaces that engineers respect. The M2 punches above its class with ultra-low latency, a surprisingly detailed metering display, and two pristine preamps. If you care about accurate monitoring and latency during live performance or tracking, this is your pick under $200.
Why it made the list
The MOTU M2 earns its place on the technical merits alone: the ESS Sabre DAC inside is the same chip found in audiophile DACs costing 5x more, and the measured round-trip latency is the lowest in this entire price tier. What that means practically is that when you're monitoring through plugins or playing a virtual instrument, the M2 responds faster than anything else here. The built-in LCD metering is also genuinely useful during recording — you can see levels at a glance without opening your DAW. It's the engineer's choice in a field of musician-friendly options.
Power User Pick
Universal Audio Volt 276
UA brings the UREI 1176-style compression circuit into a $300 interface, which is genuinely insane. Hit the "Vintage" button and you get 1176-style compression on your input signal in real time. Overkill for pure beginners, but if you're ready to invest in sound quality, the Volt 276 is the ceiling of this category.
Why it made the list
The Volt 276 is our "if you can stretch the budget" recommendation. Universal Audio's integration of an analog 1176-style compressor circuit directly into the input path means you can print compression to your recordings in real time — something that normally requires a separate $500+ hardware compressor. For vocals especially, engaging the Vintage mode adds a polished, professional presence that's immediately audible. If you're past the "just getting started" phase and want your recordings to sound like records from day one, the Volt 276 justifies its ceiling price.