# Home Recording Studio Setup on a Budget

> The minimum viable home studio setup for beginners — what to spend on first, what to skip, and how to get a demo-ready recording from a bedroom on a tight budget.

[All guides](/blog)

# Home Recording Studio Setup on a Budget

Updated June 2026 · by Loopin

A home studio doesn't need racks of gear — it needs the right things in the right order. Here's the minimum viable setup that gets you a demo-ready recording without wasting money on the wrong stuff.

## Your phone is already the studio

Before you spend a dollar, understand what you already have: a multi-track recorder, a beat player and a mixer — all in your pocket. A modern iPhone captures clean audio at 24-bit quality. The first question isn't "what should I buy" — it's "what's stopping my phone from recording something I'd be happy with." For most beginners, it's the room and the workflow, not the hardware.

## Spend on the room first, not the gear

Hard, bare walls bounce sound back at the mic and make recordings sound boxy and amateurish. You can't fix a bad-sounding room in post. Before buying any gear, find the softest spot in your home: a walk-in wardrobe with hanging clothes is a surprisingly good vocal booth. A moving blanket draped over a corner costs $20 and does more for your sound than a $100 mic upgrade. Kill the hum — fridge, fan, notifications — before every take.

## A mic in the $50–$120 range is the first real purchase

Once your room is reasonably quiet, a USB-C or Lightning condenser is the single biggest upgrade over the built-in iPhone mic. You don't need to spend more than this for a solid demo — the gap between a $80 and a $300 mic matters far less than the room and your technique. Check the full [mic buyer's guide](/blog/best-microphone-for-iphone-recording) for specific model recommendations at each price point. Add a $5 desktop clip and a folded-sock pop filter and you're done with hardware.

## Earbuds beat studio monitors for mixing on a budget

Reference-quality studio monitors run $200+. Good earbuds — the wired ones you probably already own — are a more honest mixing environment for a phone setup. They reveal harshness and muddiness clearly, they're consistent between sessions, and they cost nothing extra. When you check your rough mix, listen on earbuds first, then on your phone speaker, then on whatever Bluetooth speaker you have. If it sounds decent on all three, it'll translate.

## App and workflow: keep everything in one song

The fastest way to never finish a song is to have the beat in one app, the lyrics in a notes app, and the vocal takes scattered across Voice Memos. [Loopin](/#download) keeps the beat, lyrics and every take inside one song — so you're always building, never hunting. Key and BPM are detected automatically. The fewer apps you're juggling, the faster the song gets done. For the full workflow from beat to master, see [how to record a complete song on your phone](/blog/how-to-record-a-song-on-your-phone).

## What to skip (for now)

Pop shield stand, acoustic foam panels, shock mount, studio monitors, audio interface — skip all of it until you've actually finished and shared several songs. Gear collecting is procrastination in disguise. Foam panels only help once you've fixed the big reflections with soft furnishings; an interface only makes sense when you've already outgrown a USB-C mic. Finish songs first, upgrade after.

When you're ready to share, run the finished recording through [Loopin's free mastering tool](/mastering) for a loudness and polish pass — no extra plugin purchase needed.

## Frequently asked questions

### How much does a home recording studio setup cost for beginners?

You can start for $0 using your iPhone and earbuds. The first meaningful upgrade is a USB-C condenser mic in the $50–$120 range. A full beginner setup — mic, desktop clip, pop filter and a quiet room — comes in well under $150. Spend on the room treatment before the mic if you can only do one.

### Do I need acoustic foam to record at home?

Not to start. Hanging clothes, soft furnishings and blankets do the same job as foam panels for a bedroom singer. Foam panels are an upgrade once you've already dealt with the major reflections — don't buy them as a first step.

### What software do I need for a home studio on iPhone?

A songwriting app that keeps the beat, lyrics and takes in one place replaces a DAW for most bedroom recording workflows. Loopin handles recording, versioning and free mastering without needing a laptop or subscription.

## Related reads

- [Best mic for iPhone recording](/blog/best-microphone-for-iphone-recording)
- [Record vocals on iPhone (bedroom setup)](/blog/how-to-record-vocals-on-iphone)
- [Make a song demo at home](/blog/how-to-make-a-song-demo-at-home)

---

Source: https://onloopin.com/blog/home-recording-studio-setup-on-a-budget
