How Much Does Mastering Cost? A Straightforward Guide
Mastering prices range from a few dollars to several hundred per track. Here's what's actually behind those numbers — and how to figure out what makes sense for your situation.
If you've searched around for mastering prices, you've probably noticed the range is enormous — from $5 for an AI-mastered track to $500+ at a top-tier studio. That kind of spread makes it hard to know what's reasonable, what's overpriced, and what you're actually paying for at each level.
This post breaks down every price tier honestly, explains what drives the cost, and helps you figure out where to spend your budget based on what you're actually making.
Most independent artists working with a mid-range professional engineer pay $50–150 per track. AI mastering runs $5–20. Top-tier studios run $200–500+. The question isn't which number is cheapest — it's what you actually need for this release.
The pricing tiers — what you actually get
Click any tier to expand it and see exactly what's typically included — and what's not.
What drives the price up or down
Beyond the tier, several factors affect what any individual mastering job actually costs.
What's included here
In the interest of full transparency — here's exactly what you get when you book with me.
When to save money vs when to invest
The biggest mistake I see artists make isn't overspending on mastering — it's underspending on releases that actually matter to them, then regretting it. A $50 master on a song you spent six months writing isn't a big number. Spend the $200 on ads instead of the studio rate, and invest properly in the mastering.
One of the most useful things a mastering engineer can do is tell you if something in your mix needs attention before you release it. If you're uncertain, send it over. I'll give you an honest read — if there's something that needs fixing, I'll tell you before we start.
Hear what $50 actually sounds like on your track.
First-time clients get a free mastered sample before committing. No credit card, no obligation — just a chance to hear the difference on your actual music before you decide.