🎤 XLR Microphones

Buying guide →

Compare professional XLR microphones for podcasts and music. See prices and specs from top brands like Shure, Neumann, and Audio-Technica.

44 products · updated June 2026 · live Amazon prices

📖 Buying Guide⚖️ Compare🏷️ Deals3 related guides below

44 products

⚖️#ProductPriceSaveBuy
1$23.99View
2$29.59View
3$39.95View
4$39.99View
5$39.99View
6$39.99View
7$39.99View
8$39.99View
9$44.39View
10$45.39View
11$46.74View
12$46.95View
13$47.96View
14$49.95View
15$49.95View
16$49.99View
17$49.99View
18$49.99View
19$51.19View
20$54.99View

Showing 20 of 44 products

Frequently asked questions

What's the difference between condenser and dynamic XLR microphones?

Condensers (AT2020, Rode NT1, AKG C414) are sensitive and capture detail — ideal for studio vocals, acoustic guitars, and overheads in treated rooms. Dynamics (Shure SM7B, SM58, Sennheiser MD 421) reject room noise and handle loud sources, ideal for podcasting, broadcast, drums, and untreated rooms.

Do XLR microphones need phantom power?

Condenser XLR mics need +48 V phantom power, supplied by every modern audio interface. Dynamic mics like the SM7B don't need phantom power and won't be damaged by it. Ribbon mics do not want phantom power applied — turn it off before plugging one in.

What's the best XLR microphone for podcasting?

The Shure SM7B is the broadcast standard but needs a clean preamp with 60 dB of gain. The Rode PodMic and Procaster deliver similar broadcast tone for less money. The Electro-Voice RE20 is the alternative classic. For a budget pick, the Audio-Technica ATR2100x-USB has both XLR and USB outputs.

How long should an XLR cable be?

For desk recording, six feet (2 m) is enough. For mic-to-camera or stage runs, ten or fifteen feet (3–5 m) is standard. Mogami Gold and Hosa Pro are the most-deployed brands; Amazon Basics XLR is fine for budget setups and short runs.

Complete your setup

🚀 All products ship free with Amazon Prime. Not a member? Try free for 30 days.

📝 XLR Microphones Guides & Reviews