🎧 Buying Guide · 2026
How to Choose the Best Studio Headphones in 2026
Compare open and closed-back headphones for tracking, mixing, and mastering. Prices and ratings from Sennheiser, Beyerdynamic, Audio-Technica, and Sony.
Top 5 picks right now
- 1
Superlux Superlux HD668B
Budget studio starter
$28
⭐ 4.3
- 2
Samson Samson SR850
Ultra-budget open reference
$35
⭐ 4.3
- 3
Audio-Technica Audio-Technica ATH-M20x
Ultra-budget monitoring
$40
⭐ 4.3
- 4
OneOdio OneOdio Monitor 60
Budget Hi-Res closed
$40
⭐ 4.3
- 5
Audio-Technica Audio-Technica ATH-M30x
Entry monitoring
$60
⭐ 4.4
Ranked by value score (rating × reviews ÷ price). See all studio headphones →
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Common questions
Should I buy open-back or closed-back studio headphones?
Closed-back for tracking with a microphone (no audio leaks into the mic), late-night work, and shared spaces. Open-back for mixing and mastering — flatter response, wider stereo image, and dramatically better translation to speakers. Many engineers own one of each.
Do I need a headphone amp for the DT 770 Pro?
The 32 Ω version drives off any laptop or phone. The 80 Ω version is the studio default — drives loud and clean from any audio interface. The 250 Ω version needs a real headphone amp; skip it unless you have one.
What's the most accurate budget studio headphone?
For under $200 closed-back, the Audio-Technica ATH-M50x is the safe default with the M40x being flatter and slightly more mix-friendly. For under $200 open-back, the Sennheiser HD 560S, Beyerdynamic DT 990 Pro 80Ω, and Philips Fidelio X2HR are reference-grade.
Are studio headphones good for music listening?
Open-back studio headphones (HD 600, K712 Pro, HiFiMAN Sundara) are excellent for music listening at home — flat response, comfortable, detailed. Closed-back tracking headphones often have a hyped low end that's tiring for long listening sessions.