Audio-Technica AT2040 Review — A Sub-$100 Broadcast Mic Wonder
Audio-Technica’s broadcast-style hypercardioid finally has a sub-$100 sibling — and it punches well above its weight.
The AT2040 lives in a price bracket that previously only meant compromise. The on-axis frequency response is impressively flat from 80 Hz to 12 kHz, the off-axis rejection is genuinely tight, and the integrated shock mount actually works at desk level.
On a typical streaming setup with a Focusrite Scarlett or a GoXLR Mini, the AT2040 sounds noticeably better than the popular sub-$100 USB condenser tier. The dynamic capsule means less room treatment is required, which is the real reason to consider it for shared spaces.
The catch is that this is an XLR-only mic. If your only audio path is USB, you will need a budget interface to use it — and that pushes the all-in cost closer to $200. For anyone with an interface already, it is the best $100 you can spend on stream audio.
For XLR users, the AT2040 is the new sub-$100 default. For USB-only setups, the price math gets harder.

Leave a Reply