Typical Price Ranges in 2025

 

One of the most common questions I get from new clients is: “How much does it cost to get a song mixed and mastered?”And the honest answer is—it depends.

 

Now before you roll your eyes, hear me out.

 

There’s no fixed menu for this stuff. While my pricing is fairly fixed compared to others. prices vary depending on who you’re working with, how complex the song is, and how fast you need it back. It’s kind of like asking how much it costs to get a tattoo. You can get one for $50, or you can pay $1,500. Both are technically tattoos, but the experience and results are completely different.

 

So, let’s break it down.

 

 

Mixing Services: What You Can Expect to Pay

 

In 2025, mixing a song professionally can cost anywhere from $100 to over $1,500 per track. Here’s a rough breakdown by tier:

 

Entry-Level Engineers ($100–$250): These are usually newer mixers or engineers working from home studios. You might find decent results, especially if your song is simple (e.g., 2-track beats with vocals), but consistency can vary.
Mid-Tier Professionals ($300–$700): This is the sweet spot for most indie artists. You’re getting someone with experience, genre-specific knowledge, and a proper monitoring setup. Most of my clients fall into this range.
High-End Mix Engineers ($1500–$3500+): Think Serban Ghenea, Manny Marroquin, or engineers with Grammy wins and major label discographies. If your track’s headed to radio or you’re backed by a serious budget, this level makes sense.

Mastering Services: A Different Price Bracket

 

Mastering tends to be a bit more affordable, but it still varies:

 

Entry-Level ($20–$50): Usually offered by budget studios or freelancers who may or may not specialize in mastering.

Pro-Level ($70–$150): These are engineers who understand mastering as its own craft. They have worked on projects at the major label level, and they know how to get your song loud without killing the dynamics—and how to make it translate across every system.

op-Tier ($250–$300+): At this level, you’re paying for elite ears, and major label credits.

Remember, mixing and mastering are two very different stages in the production process. If you’re still fuzzy on what separates them, I break it all down here: The Difference Between Mixing and Mastering.

 

Mixing Engineer matty Harris and Timbaland

Mixing Engineer matty Harris and Timbaland

What Affects the Price of Mixing and Mastering?

 

If you’ve ever browsed through a bunch of mixing and mastering websites, you’ve probably noticed the price differences can feel all over the map. One site might offer a full mix for $75, while another starts at $500 and goes up from there. So what’s actually behind those numbers?

 

Let’s break down the biggest factors that influence cost—and what you’re really paying for.

 

 

1. The Engineer’s Experience and Credits

 

This one’s obvious, but it matters. An engineer who’s mixed for Grammy-winning artists, has a decade of experience, and understands your genre inside and out is going to charge more than someone who just downloaded their first DAW last year.

 

That said, higher price doesn’t always mean better. Some engineers overcharge because they can, and some up-and-comers are still figuring out how to price their work. The key is to listen to the work, not just the rate sheet.

 

 

2. Track Count and Song Complexity

 

A vocal over a stereo beat is a very different job than a 70-track pop production with stacks of vocals, synths, guitars, live drums, and FX. More tracks mean more time, more decisions, and often more revisions.

 

If your song is arrangement-heavy or has complex automation and vocal production, you should expect to pay more—it’s not just mixing, it’s managing the entire ecosystem of your track.

 

 

3. Turnaround Time

 

Want it back tomorrow? Rush jobs typically come with a rush fee. Engineers who respect their own schedule—and yours—build in buffer time so the work doesn’t suffer. If you need something fast, just be upfront and prepared to pay a bit extra.

 

 

4. Analog Gear vs. In-the-Box

 

Some engineers still run mixes or masters through analog hardware—like compressors, EQs, or tape machines—to add a specific kind of color or warmth. That gear is expensive, and so is maintaining it. Not every mix needs it, but if that’s your vibe, it might raise the cost.

 

 

5. Revisions and Client Support

 

Not every service is equal when it comes to client interaction. Some engineers offer unlimited revisions and will happily jump on Zoom calls to walk through feedback. Others include one round of revisions and charge for extras. Neither is wrong—it’s just important to know what you’re getting.

 

 

6. The Extras That Add Up

 

Want an instrumental mix? Clean version? Stems for remixing? All of these are standard requests—but not always included in the base price. Ask ahead of time, or better yet, look for engineers (like myself) who are transparent about what’s included.

 

 

 

And here’s a tip: before you start comparing prices, ask yourself what you’re really looking for. If you’re still on the fence about going pro or doing it yourself, I put together a deeper look at the tradeoffs here: DIY vs. Professional Mixing and Mastering.

 

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What’s Actually Included in the Price?

 

A lot of confusion around mixing and mastering prices comes from not knowing what’s actually included. One engineer charges $400 per song and another charges $150, but unless you know what you’re getting in both cases, it’s hard to compare.

 

So let’s walk through what’s typically included when you hire a professional.

 

 

What’s Included in a Professional Mix

 

When you hire someone to mix your track, you’re not just paying for fader moves. You’re paying for experience, taste, and the ability to make your music compete with what’s on the radio or your favorite playlists. A good mixing service usually includes:

 

Balancing the track (volume, panning, automation)
EQ and compression to create space and glue
Creative effects like reverb, delay, distortion, modulation
Vocal tuning (if needed) and timing adjustments
Mix buss processing for punch and cohesion
Multiple file versions: full mix, instrumental, a cappella, clean edits, etc.
One or more rounds of revisions based on your feedback
If your engineer is just slapping a limiter on and calling it a day, you’re not getting a real mix.

 

 

What’s Included in a Mastering Session

 

Mastering is the final polish—it’s not about fixing a bad mix (though we’ve all tried), but about enhancing a good one. Here’s what you should expect from a solid mastering service:

 

EQ and compression for tonal balance and clarity
Limiting to bring up the loudness without distortion
Stereo widening or tightening (if needed)
Dithering and proper file prep for release
Multiple formats: WAV, MP3, optional DDP or vinyl-ready files
Loudness targets for streaming platforms (Spotify, Apple Music, etc.)
Some mastering engineers will also include before/after playback comparisons, loudness reports, or even quick feedback on your mix before starting—especially helpful if you’re still dialing in your sound.

 

 

Bottom line: not every engineer includes the same deliverables, so always ask. I list everything that comes with my services on my homepage so artists know exactly what to expect—no surprises, no upsells mid-project.

 

Is It Ever Worth Paying Top Dollar?

 

This is where things get tricky. Because, let’s be honest—there are engineers out there charging $3,500 per mix. And yes, some of them are worth every penny. But the real question is: is it worth it for you?

 

Let me give you the honest breakdown.

 

 

When Paying More Makes Sense

 

If your music is already at a high level—radio-ready production, strong performances, and a clear vision—then hiring a top-tier mixer or mastering engineer can take things from great to elite. This is especially true if:

 

You’re working with a label or management team and need to hit broadcast or commercial quality
Your release has a marketing push behind it (ads, PR, playlisting)
You’re collaborating with known artists and want the end product to reflect that
You’ve already tried a few mixers and aren’t getting the results you hear in pro tracks
In those cases, paying more isn’t just about sound—it’s about credibility. The right name in your credits can help open doors, especially in sync licensing, radio, or press placements.

 

 

But Higher Price Doesn’t Always Mean Higher Quality

 

On the flip side, I’ve heard $1,000 mixes that sounded rushed, over-compressed, or just plain wrong for the artist’s style. Price should never be the only metric.

 

That’s why I always tell artists: listen to the work first. Check their portfolio, see if they’ve worked in your genre, and—if possible—ask for a sample mix or short test master.

 

In fact, I’ve had a lot of clients come to me after spending more elsewhere and feeling disappointed with the results. They weren’t just paying for “the big name”—they were paying for mismatched expectations.

 

 

What Really Matters Is Fit

 

It’s not about finding the most expensive option—it’s about finding someone who understands your music and knows how to bring it to life. Someone who gets your sound and works collaboratively with you, not just on autopilot.

 

Mixing Engineer Matty Harris

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How to Choose the Right Engineer for Your Budget

 

Let’s say you’ve got a budget in mind—maybe it’s $200, maybe it’s $800. How do you actually find the right person for the job? Because let’s face it: hiring a mixing or mastering engineer isn’t just a transaction. You’re trusting someone with your music—your art—and the wrong choice can leave you disappointed (or worse, broke and disappointed).

 

Here’s how I’d approach it if I were in your shoes.

 

 

1. Look for Genre Experience, Not Just Credits

 

Just because someone mixed a hit for a pop artist doesn’t mean they’re going to nail your alt-R&B project. Style matters. If your mix engineer works mostly on trap beats and you’re a folk singer-songwriter, there’s going to be a mismatch in tone, feel, and priorities.

 

Before you reach out, ask yourself:

 

Have they worked with artists like me?
Do their samples sound close to the kind of records I love?
Can they mix vocals the way I hear them in my head?
A few good examples will tell you more than a long client list ever will.

 

 

2. Listen to Before/After Samples (and Pay Attention to the Details)

 

A solid mix or master should elevate the raw track without changing the vibe. You’re listening for clarity, balance, punch, and emotional impact. Does the vocal sit naturally? Does the master sound clean but still loud enough to compete on Spotify?

 

Most engineers will have audio examples on their site (I do), and some even include breakdowns so you can hear exactly what changed.

 

 

3. Understand What’s Included

 

As we covered earlier, not every service includes the same deliverables. You’ll want to know:

 

How many revisions are included?
Do you get alternate versions? Stems?
How long is the turnaround time?
What happens if you’re not happy?
For example, at Mix and Master My Song, I offer 3 revisions and aim to turn around projects in 3–5 business days—because I want clients to feel confident and not nickel-and-dimed.

 

 

4. Ask About a Sample or Test Run

 

If you’re still unsure, see if they’ll do a test mix or short master clip. Not everyone offers this, but many engineers are open to it for serious inquiries. It gives both of you a chance to see if it’s a good fit before money changes hands. I would add a few words of caution here. I don’t offer test mix or masters, I’m just way too busy. I’ve found that people who do are either just getting started or hurting for work, and that might not be a good thing in either case.

 

 

5. Match Personality with Process

 

This one’s underrated. You want to work with someone who communicates clearly, listens to feedback, and isn’t defensive about making changes. Some engineers are all tech and no people skills—and that can make the process feel cold or frustrating.

 

You don’t need a therapist. But you do need someone who respects your creative vision and helps you bring it across the finish line.

 

 

At the end of the day, finding the right engineer is like finding the right collaborator—it should feel like they’re on your team, not just hitting export and collecting a payment.

 

The cost of mixing and mastering

DIY vs. Professional: The Hidden Costs

 

Now, I’m all for artists learning how to mix and master their own music. In fact, I teach people how to do that every day. But if we’re being real, doing it yourself isn’t free—even if you’re not pulling out your credit card.

 

There’s a difference between saving money and saving time, energy, and the emotional toll of second-guessing your sound.

 

Let’s talk about the real costs of going DIY.

 

 

Time (a Lot of It)

 

Mixing isn’t just about knowing where to put the reverb—it’s about making a hundred micro-decisions that all add up. When you’re new, those decisions take forever. You tweak one thing, mess up another, bounce it out, listen in the car, go back in, get frustrated, do it again…

 

That’s hours—if not days—you’re not spending writing, recording, or promoting your music. And if you’ve got a job, a family, or other projects, that time adds up fast.

 

 

Money on Gear and Plugins

 

DIY isn’t really free. The DAW license, the interface, the studio monitors, the sound treatment, the endless plugin deals—it all adds up. Before you know it, you’ve spent more on Black Friday bundles than you would’ve on a pro mix or master.

 

And still, your track doesn’t sound the way you want.

 

 

Quality That Costs You Opportunities

 

Here’s the part most artists don’t think about: a mix that doesn’t sound professional can hurt your career more than the money you saved by doing it yourself.

 

It might mean your song gets skipped on a playlist.

Or doesn’t land a sync placement.

Or just doesn’t hit the way it should when someone’s listening on good headphones.

 

That’s not fear-mongering—it’s just how competitive the music world is today. The truth is, listeners do judge sound, even if they can’t explain why.

 

 

Conclusion: You Don’t Need the Most Expensive—You Need the Right Fit

 

If you’ve made it this far, you already know there’s no one-size-fits-all answer to “How much does mixing and mastering cost?” The truth is, it’s not about finding the cheapest or most expensive option—it’s about finding the right engineer who understands your music and respects your vision.

 

Whether you’re just getting started or releasing your third EP, you deserve a final product that holds up next to the artists you admire.

 

So here’s my advice:

👉 Know your budget.

👉 Be clear about what you need.

👉 And most importantly, listen to the work—not just the price tag.

 

If you’re looking for someone who brings professional experience, a fast and friendly workflow, and results that compete in today’s loud world, I’d love to help.

You can learn more about my process or get a custom quote right here: Mix and Master My Song

Mixing and Mastering Engineer Matty Harris

Hello, I'm Matty Harris, and I've been professionally mixing and mastering music for over 20 years.

Throughout my career, I've had the privilege of working with many major labels and contributing to numerous #1 records. Some of the artists I've worked with include Kelly Clarkson, Travis Barker, and Sammy Adams.

My extensive experience in the industry has equipped me with the skills and knowledge to help musicians elevate their sound to a professional level. Whether you're a seasoned artist or just starting out, I can provide you with the techniques and insights you need to overcome any challenges in your mixing and mastering journey.