The Best Digital Audio Workstations (DAWs) We’ve Tested for 2026

The Best Digital Audio Workstations (DAWs) We’ve Tested for 2026

A generation ago, you needed thousands of dollars’ worth of gear to record a music album at a professional level—and that’s without microphones, speakers, and other accessories. Now, digital audio workstations (DAWs) can deliver hundreds of audio tracks, versatile effect plug-ins, and incredibly flexible editing tools for a three-digit sum, or even for free. I’ve used DAWs since my first multitrack MIDI recordings with a Korg M1 and Atari ST in the late 1980s; produced sound effects and music for video games for years; and recorded, mixed, and mastered albums for indie artists. Based on my expertise and testing, Apple GarageBand (for free users), Apple Logic Pro (for the Mac faithful), Avid Pro Tools (for studio workflows), and Steinberg Cubase (for PC editors) are all Editors’ Choice winners. Still, you should check out all of our top picks below, followed by advice about choosing the right DAW for your recording needs.

Deeper Dive: Our Top Tested Picks

EDITORS’ NOTE

March 10, 2026: With this update, we removed Magix Sequoia and PreSonus Studio One from our list, as they have been discontinued. We have vetted our other picks for currency and availability.

  • Powerful, customizable AI session players
  • Array of bundled instruments sounds excellent
  • iPad version is extremely powerful
  • No copy protection, unlike many competitors
  • Terrific value
  • Chord AI is hit or miss
  • Some limitations for scoring film and video

For Mac owners, Logic Pro does it all. It costs hundreds less than competing DAWs and not much more than budget options like Cockos Reaper. Logic Pro is packed with virtual instruments and effects plug-ins, including 6,000 presets and more than 13,500 royalty-free loops. It also has a useful Live performance and composition mode that gives you much of what Ableton Live offers.

Composers and Producers: Logic Pro is well known as a do-it-all DAW that can handle just about any project, from mixing to mastering, post-production, and sound design.

First-time DAW users: Logic Pro is a pro-level application in every way. But it has two levels of menus, which let you simplify the user experience while you’re getting used to it or if you’re upgrading from GarageBand.

Mac fans: Apple Logic Pro is the best DAW for most people who own Macs—unless you have a high-end professional studio, in which case we’d give the nod to Pro Tools for its extensive hardware and support policies, along with its unparalleled audio editing workflow. But Logic Pro remains a do-it-all app for composing, mix engineering, mastering, film scoring, and post-production.

Audio Tracks

Unlimited

Instruments

28

Effects

61

Bundled Content

75GB

Learn More

Apple Logic Pro Review

  • Streamlined interface
  • Supports 24-bit recording and third-party plug-ins
  • Versatile Producer Packs
  • Enjoyable instrument lessons

Unlike the cartoonish version that debuted in the early aughts, GarageBand features a surprisingly serious presentation that roughly mirrors the high-end Logic. Although GarageBand lacks Logic’s fantastic flexibility, a vast array of instruments, and potent mixing and mastering features, it’s almost as powerful for other tasks. The fact that GarageBand is free makes it all the better.

Beginners: GarageBand offers easy music recording for novices and pros alike, and it comes free with every Mac. It’s still one of the best ways to learn piano or guitar with a computer.

Singer/songwriters: If you’re more comfortable behind the mic or guitar than you are in front of a mix console, GarageBand is capable of recordings that are indistinguishable from pro releases. It’s not like 30 years ago, when you could tell if someone was using budget gear or free software.

Audio Tracks

255

Instruments

Presets Only

Effects

48

Bundled Content

15GB

Learn More

Apple GarageBand Review

  • Responsive, rock-solid audio engine
  • Comprehensive editing and automation support
  • Robust instrument and plug-in bundle
  • Redesigned MixConsole is terrific

Steinberg Cubase has a long and storied history in the music industry, first appearing on the Atari ST in the late 1980s before migrating to Macs and PCs. Cubase Pro is a powerful, ultra-flexible recording and production environment, a top-notch digital audio workstation particularly suited to MIDI editing and running virtual instruments. It’s also terrific on Macs, although Apple Logic Pro offers comparable power at a lower price.

Composers: Cubase Pro is well-suited for music composition and is, in my opinion, the smoothest of the major DAWs at this. It’s also a capable recording and post-production tool, with its exceptional MixConsole and flexible editing facilities.

Film scorers: Cubase has long excelled at the type of detailed MIDI composition work, score sheet production, and synchronization with various kinds of video in which commercial, film, and game composers specialize. That doesn’t mean you need Cubase specifically to do these things; just that Cubase is exceptionally good at it.

Audio Tracks

Unlimited

Instruments

6

Effects

87

Bundled Content

50GB

Learn More

Steinberg Cubase Review

  • Still the cleanest audio editing workflow on the planet
  • Fast 64-bit recording and mixing engine
  • High-end hardware and support policies are tops in the industry
  • Expensive, subscription-only pricing (with a caveat)

Avid has unlocked Pro Tools, its venerable audio recording and editing software, for a new generation while maintaining its status as the standard cross-platform solution for professional music, film, game, and broadcast production worldwide. And its workflow for veteran mix engineers remains second to none. A reintroduced free version (Pro Tools Intro) lets a new generation of up-and-coming engineers get on board again. Pro Tools works well on Macs and PCs. But Apple Logic Pro edges it out on Macs, while Cubase Pro is a better value on PCs.

Anyone hiring a pro to contribute to or mix their work: Buying into Pro Tools, in whatever capacity, will mean your projects have the largest potential compatibility base should you want to work with other musicians or forward a project to a producer.

Studio engineers: Pro Tools is ideal for larger studios with lots of outboard hardware and the need for extensive support networks, along with anyone studying audio engineering in school.

Audio Tracks

2048

Instruments

8

Effects

120

Bundled Content

15GB

Learn More

Avid Pro Tools Review

  • Inspirational clip-based live performance and composition workflow
  • Excellent new Mood Reel and Drone Lab packs
  • Fast navigation
  • Powerful automation
  • No notation view
  • No pitch correction tool
  • Still not an all-purpose DAW despite the high price

Ableton Live is a powerful all-in-the-box solution for composing and performing live music, particularly electronic-influenced tunes. Since its launch in 2001, Ableton Live has become the go-to composing environment for many musicians, with an eye toward real-time performance on stage. If you take to Ableton Live’s intuitive clip-based approach to building music tracks, you might find yourself completely immersed, creating new songs all the time and never needing another program.

Electronic music producers: If you compose electronic music with an eye toward live performance or want to turn on-the-spot performances into recorded tracks, you will thrive with Ableton Live’s approach.

Live performers: If you bring a laptop on stage, it’s tough to beat Ableton Live’s Session view and ability to create scenes to trigger clips and loops.

Audio Tracks

Unlimited

Instruments

17

Effects

60

Bundled Content

75GB

Learn More

Ableton Live Review

  • Free
  • New real-time tools and bar-beat grid amp up music recording capabilities
  • Lots of editing options ideal for dialogue, sound effects, and trimming music tracks
  • Supports multitrack audio playback and batch processing
  • No multitrack recording
  • Mixer view lacks features

A powerful, free, open-source editor that’s been available for years, Audacity works smoothly with up to 32-bit/384kHz audio, complete with built-in dithering. The program lets you easily import, mix, and combine audio tracks (stereo, mono, or even multitrack recording) and render the output as one. It also offers flexible editing down to the sample level and spectrogram and spectral views for analyzing frequency response.

Podcasters: If you want to get started in podcasting, Audacity is a great way to record and produce your shows.

Sound designers: As a powerful, free, open-source audio editor that’s been available for years, Audacity is still the go-to choice for quick-and-dirty audio work, whether you’re making sound effects for video games or polishing up rough audio recordings from your phone. Note: Although you get unlimited undo and redos, Audacity’s edits are almost always destructive, so it won’t replace a proper digital audio workstation like Avid Pro Tools and Apple Logic Pro. And professionals looking for broadcast-specific tools should take a closer look at Adobe Audition.

Audio Tracks

Unlimited

Effects

41

Bundled Content

None

Learn More

Audacity Review

  • Multi-channel audio recording, mixing, and mastering at a bargain price
  • Useful new track comping tools
  • Heavily customizable
  • Fast, with an extremely light memory footprint
  • No built-in instruments or loops
  • Unintuitive interface

Reaper delivers live audio and virtual instrument recording, a full mixing console, accurate notation editing, and video scoring support. Unlike many competing DAWs, Reaper lets you build custom menus, toolbars, and macros and change the entire look and color scheme of the interface. It’s a complex program requiring study—perhaps the opposite of something like Apple’s GarageBand. But put in the time, load it up with some free (or paid) third-party plug-ins, and it pays dividends in power and flexibility.

Linux users: Precious few digital audio workstation apps are available on Linux, but Reaper is one of the best. It’s also the only one in this roundup that’s truly cross-platform, with versions available for Windows and Macs as well.

Musicians on a budget: Reaper covers nearly all the bases of a Pro Tools or Cubase-equipped workstation at a fraction of the price. Composers, producers, and garage bands (the real kind) with limited funds should take an especially close look.

Audio Tracks

Unlimited

Effects

34

Bundled Content

None

Learn More

Cockos Reaper Review

  • Brilliant loop and pattern-based MIDI composition tools
  • Sharp, colorful UI with the latest round of improvements
  • Kepler synth delivers analog Roland vibes
  • Visible automation clips are easy to manipulate
  • Free lifetime updates
  • Still not intuitive for regular multitrack recording
  • Lacks notation editor

Image-Line’s FL Studio, affectionately known to long-term fans as FruityLoops (the app’s original name when it debuted in 1998), has matured over the years into a powerful DAW. Although it’s still clearly geared for electronic music production “in the box,” instead of recording live musicians playing acoustic instruments, you can record or create just about any audio project with it.

Anyone craving the hardware boxes of old: If you like producing music using an Akai MPC or a rack of outboard gear, FL Studio takes that same experience and puts it up on the screen, while also offering more modern recording and editing tools than something like Reason (which hews exactly to mimicking the rackmount hardware experience).

EDM and hip-hop producers: FL Studio lets you produce some of today’s slickest beats right up to full electronic dance music tracks. If that sounds like your style, FL Studio could be key to unlocking your creativity. It caters to step sequencer and pattern-based playlist fans more than those expecting a more linear multitrack recording experience.

Audio Tracks

500

Instruments

26

Effects

67

Bundled Content

10GB

Learn More

Image-Line FL Studio Review

  • Strong audio-restoration, sound-removal, and noise-reduction tools
  • Loudness Meter is a boon for targeting streaming services
  • Can finally cut and paste effects between mixer channels
  • Useful visualization tools
  • Adheres to film and television broadcast standards for audio
  • Only available via an expensive monthly subscription
  • Lacks MIDI and virtual instrument support
  • Limited scoring facilities

From topping off your audio clips and getting them to sit just right in a final video project or podcast to crafting sound effects for video games and ducking music to spotlight voice-overs, Audition excels. It’s a powerful, cross-platform suite in a category by itself. It has specialized tools for cleaning up or restoring audio. It offers precision, nondestructive editing for corporate and commercial videos and podcasts, too. Unlike Audacity, which is a much simpler program, Audition is also stellar in post-production.

Creative Cloud subscribers: If you already pay for Creative Cloud to get the likes of Premiere, Photoshop, Lightroom, InDesign, but want to do some audio work or record your live band, Audition is a no-brainer. It’s a very capable program for this purpose.

Engineers working in post-production: Audition is a comprehensive audio editor if you are interested in audio restoration, broadcast radio or television, podcasts, and video post. It makes the most sense as a supplement to a video editor. Although Audition can function as a DAW, it’s too limited and expensive for that, given its lack of MIDI support and virtual music composition tools.

Audio Tracks

128

Effects

50

Bundled Content

8GB

Learn More

Adobe Audition Review



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The Best Digital Audio Workstations (DAWs) for 2026
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Buying Guide: The Best Digital Audio Workstations (DAWs) for 2026


How to Pick the Right DAW

If you were recording 20 or 30 years ago, a modern DAW might seem limitless in its possibilities. If you are coming in fresh, though, it might look hopelessly complex. Choosing the right audio software can be pretty tricky. Most famous packages, such as Cubase Pro, Logic Pro, and Pro Tools, have been around for decades. They’ve grown incredibly powerful and, as a result, have user interfaces as complex as, well, professional hardware mix consoles.

An SSL console from the side

Real consoles sure look cool (Credit: SSL/Funk Studios)

Before I get into the specifics, the most straightforward program for audio editing is a two-track editor, such as the free Audacity. Although Audacity aspires to some fundamental multitrack recording with overdubs, its real use is as a solid stereo editor. If you’re recording a podcast or editing a clip of your kid’s piano recital that you recorded on your phone, Audacity is an excellent choice; you can probably start and stop there. If you need something more sophisticated, read on.

It helps to think about the kinds of projects you want to create. Are you planning to produce beats for hip-hop or fully electronic compositions? Do you want to record multiple musicians playing live instruments at once? Will you use your setup to score for videos or movies, or create sound effects and dialogue for TV and video games? Do you need fully polished, printed scores, or would you prefer to work with musical notes and staves? Do you plan on tuning the pitch of vocal performances? Working out the answers to these questions up front will help you narrow your choices.

Ableton Live

Ableton Live (Credit: Ableton/PCMag)

Numerous venerable (and excellent) recording magazines have reviewed these applications many times over the years. That’s great for the existing user base of each DAW, but maybe not always quite as clear for newcomers. In reviews, I do my best to approach each product as a whole rather than devoting most of the space to just covering the latest features.


What Comes With Each DAW?

The good news is that all of the packages I tested can more or less do all of the above tasks, with a few notable exceptions. The trick is that each program has specific strengths, and some tasks might be a bit more complicated in one than in another. One overarching rule to help you decide faster is to look at what your colleagues or friends are using and then choose the same package. That makes it easier to share tips or even projects with each other, rather than being the lone person using a particular product and then introducing session import issues.

Another option is to look at what each program bundles. Would you prefer a DAW with many virtual instrument sounds, such as electric basses, guitars, sampled violins, and synthesizers? You might want to look at something like Cubase Pro or Logic Pro, which include many gigabytes of sounds and loops. Do you have or plan to buy your own instrument plug-ins? Reaper is a fully stripped-down DAW at a low price, and it makes an excellent host for third-party Virtual Studio Technology (VST) plugins. It’s also great if you’re recording a band full of live instruments and don’t need much in the way of virtual ones.

Do your tastes lean toward the electronic and synthesized realm? Ableton Live and FL Studio are inspired choices with plenty of built-in synths, though you can produce electronic music with just about any of these programs. Cubase Pro and Digital Performer are perennial favorites for film scoring, although several other DAWs can also do it (if not quite as ably). If you like the idea of working on an iPad but don’t like the underpowered apps available over the last decade, Apple’s Logic Pro for iPad could well change your mind.

Avid Pro Compressor

Avid Pro Compressor (Credit: Avid/PCMag)

Often, your decision comes down to details and editing philosophies. Do you prefer loop-based recording and live playback for electronic music? Ableton Live has plenty to offer you. Do you not only want to bring projects into professional studios but also collaborate online and open sessions directly as you work on them with others? It’s impossible to top Avid’s Pro Tools for this. Do you work in post-production and want to produce more professional podcasts or videos? Adobe Audition is a prime contender for those tasks. And if you’ve got a Mac, it’s worth giving the free GarageBand a spin, if only because it’s more potent than ever and you already own it.


How Much Should You Spend on a DAW?

Closely correlated with bundled instruments and effects is price, which can cloud the issue. Many top-tier packages have less expensive (or even free) feature-limited editions. It’s not as simple as saying, “Reaper is a budget DAW at $60, and Cubase Pro is a professional-level DAW at $579,” because you can also buy the stripped-down (but still pretty feature-rich) Cubase Elements for $99. What do you lose? What do you gain? I cover these questions as much as possible within each review.


What DAW Is Best for Beginners?

My favorite beginner DAW is Apple GarageBand, which prioritizes ease of use and helps you get started recording and mixing. Pro Tools Intro is also a great way to get your feet wet with Avid’s venerable studio software. Both come with at least some virtual instruments and can work with external audio interfaces to record audio instruments and vocals. You can also take advantage of a wide array of free effects and instrument plug-ins. Speaking of getting started, if you’re a beginner or want to help someone else get started with recording, you might also be interested in the next question.


Is There Free DAW Software?

Yes! Apple GarageBand, Audacity, and Pro Tools Intro are all free. Cakewalk by BandLab was extremely powerful for a free program, given its history as the professional-level Sonar before BandLab bought the rights to it. Unfortunately, BandLab discontinued Cakewalk in favor of a wholesale rewrite and reintroduction of Sonar as a paid product, along with a lower-cost, creation-focused version called Cakewalk Next, which I have yet to test.

Recommended by Our Editors


Unfortunately, this question is impossible to answer. Few (if any) vendors break out their sales receipts to show how many copies are in the wild, and no one really does comprehensive “What DAW software do you use?” surveys. You’ll find plenty of smaller polls if you dig into user forums, Reddit, and such, but there’s no way to determine which DAW sells the best.

A few themes do crop up in the smaller polls, though, and it’s easy to spot some long-term trends. Pro Tools continues to be a favorite in professional studios and is something of a standard for swapping full session files—although any DAW can import straight audio tracks, which often suffices when collaborating, or, say, hiring a session player. Just about any recording studio or pro mixing engineer will have some way of reading a Pro Tools session, and most of the courses you see in trade schools for audio engineering focus on Pro Tools in particular.

Apple Logic Pro

Apple Logic Pro (Credit: Apple/PCMag)

Logic Pro is also a favorite because of its value. Its costs are more in line with lower-tier DAWs at $199, but it’s clearly on par with Cubase, Digital Performer, and Pro Tools. Apple used to price it closer to those alternatives a few decades ago. Electronic music-focused DAWs, such as Ableton Live and FL Studio, have picked up plenty of steam in recent years. Reaper has also found plenty of fans for its light, streamlined, and inexpensive approach, and it works on Linux as well as macOS and Windows.


Which DAW Is Right for You?

In short, read my reviews (linked below) and try some demos when you can. Otherwise, don’t sweat it too much. I spent countless hours testing these products, compiling the reviews, and writing this guide. And, as mentioned above, all of the top contenders are worthy choices.

Even so, four DAWs stand out as Editors’ Choice winners. Avid Pro Tools is my pick for high-end professional recording studios for its terrific audio editing workflow. Apple Logic Pro is the best Mac DAW, thanks to its unbeatable value and variety of instruments and effects plug-ins. Steinberg Cubase Pro is the best PC DAW because of its slick MixConsole, terrific editing tools, and just-as-robust plug-in bundle. Apple GarageBand is my choice for budget-priced DAWs—it doesn’t cost anything to use on an Apple device. But to reiterate, I’d happily use any programs listed here for new projects. Choose one, learn its secrets, and get to work creating and editing fantastic music and audio.

Autor

  • Gaby Souza é criador do MdroidTech, especialista em tecnologia, aplicativos, jogos e tendências do mundo digital. Com anos de experiência testando dispositivos e softwares, compartilha análises, tutoriais e notícias para ajudar usuários a aproveitarem ao máximo seus aparelhos. Apaixonado por inovação, mantém o compromisso de entregar conteúdo original, confiável e fácil de entender