Podcast Equipment for Beginners: What You Actually Need
Walk into any podcasting forum and you'll find endless debates about microphones, interfaces, and acoustic treatment. Here's the truth: most of that can wait. Let's focus on what actually matters when you're starting out.
The Mindset Shift
Before we talk gear, understand this: content matters more than audio quality. A fascinating conversation recorded on a decent microphone beats a boring one on a $500 setup.
That said, audio quality should be good enough that it doesn't distract listeners.
The Essential Setup (Under $150)
1. A USB Microphone - $50-100
For beginners, USB microphones are the sweet spot. They're plug-and-play with no additional equipment needed.
Top recommendations:
- Audio-Technica ATR2100x-USB (~$80) - Best value, sounds great, dual USB/XLR
- Samson Q2U (~$70) - Similar quality, slightly cheaper
- Blue Yeti (~$100) - Popular choice, but requires more acoustic treatment
Pro tip: Dynamic microphones (ATR2100x, Q2U) reject room noise better than condenser mics (Yeti).
2. Headphones - $20-50
You need headphones to monitor audio and edit. They don't need to be fancy.
- Any over-ear headphones work for starting out
- Avoid earbuds—they don't give accurate sound representation
- Sony MDR-7506 (~$80) is the industry standard when you're ready to upgrade
3. Pop Filter - $15
This eliminates "plosives"—the harsh sounds from P and B words.
- Foam windscreens work and come with many USB mics
- Nylon pop filters are more effective but take up space
4. Recording/Editing Software - Free
- Audacity - Free, works on all platforms
- GarageBand - Free for Mac users
- Descript - Freemium with transcription features
That's it. $65-165 and you're ready to record.
What You DON'T Need (Yet)
Audio Interface
USB microphones don't require one. Wait until you need multiple XLR inputs.
Mixer
Overkill for beginning podcasters. Your recording software handles mixing.
Expensive Acoustic Treatment
Start with what you have—closets, soft rooms, or blankets draped around your space.
Boom Arm
Nice to have, but a desk stand works fine. Get comfortable with the hobby first.
The Upgrade Path
Once you've recorded 25+ episodes and know you're committed:
Level 2: Better Audio (~$300 total)
- XLR microphone (Shure SM58 or Rode PodMic)
- Audio interface (Focusrite Scarlett Solo)
- Boom arm and shock mount
Level 3: Professional Setup (~$800+)
- High-end microphone (Shure SM7B or Electro-Voice RE20)
- Multi-input interface (Focusrite Scarlett 2i2 or RODECaster Pro)
- Acoustic panels
- Studio headphones
Room Setup Tips
No amount of equipment fixes a bad recording environment. Quick wins:
- Record in small, soft spaces - Closets and bedrooms beat empty offices
- Hang blankets - Improvised acoustic treatment works
- Close windows and doors - Minimize background noise
- Get close to the mic - 4-6 inches is ideal
- Test before you record - Do a quick check every session
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Buying too much gear upfront - Start minimal, upgrade based on actual needs
- Ignoring the room - A $50 mic in a treated room beats a $500 mic in an echo chamber
- Forgetting batteries/power - Have backups for anything battery-powered
- Not backing up recordings - Use cloud storage immediately
The Real Investment
Your biggest investment should be:
- Time to learn your equipment - Practice before recording real episodes
- Energy into content planning - Great content beats great audio
- Consistency in showing up - Weekly practice compounds
Ready to plan what you'll talk about on your podcast? Build your strategy first—equipment is the easy part.