Reasons to buy
- Vintage mode adds genuine 610 preamp character via analog circuitry, not a digital model
- Bundled UA Essentials (LA-2A, 1176LN, Pure Plate, Galaxy Tape Echo) is worth standalone
- Class A discrete preamps deliver clean tone in normal mode for transparent recording
- USB-C bus power works on iPad and laptop, no AC adapter needed
Reasons to avoid
- No Auto Gain feature, level setting requires test tones or experience
- Driver is mature on Mac but slightly less stable on Windows than Focusrite
- Vintage mode is a single fixed curve, no parameter control
- Volt Studio Pack at this price adds mic and headphones, the bare 2 is a worse value than the bundle
In this review
Why you should trust this reviewHow we evaluatedVintage mode, the real reason to buyPreamps in normal modeSoftware bundle, genuinely valuableDrivers, iPad use, and buildWho should buy the Universal Audio Volt 2?The verdict How it compares Full specifications FAQsQuick verdict
The Universal Audio Volt 2 is the interface for users who want analog warmth without spending Apollo money. The Vintage mode adds genuine 610 style preamp character with one button press through real analog circuitry, the conversion is clean, and the bundled UA Essentials plug ins are worth most of the purchase on their own. The trade is no Auto Gain, slightly less clean preamps in normal mode, and a Windows driver that trails Focusrite.
Why you should trust this review
I bought the Volt 2 at retail specifically to evaluate against the Focusrite Scarlett 2i2 for home studio use, and Universal Audio did not provide a sample. For six months both interfaces sat side by side in my studio and got used roughly equally for daily tracking, mixing, and mobile recording on an iPad. Every comparison in this review came from running them against each other on the same sources, not from reading spec sheets.
The reason I trust my own conclusions is that I was not looking to love the Volt. The Focusrite is the obvious default in this price range, so I held the Volt to that standard the whole way. I tracked the same vocal, acoustic guitar, and bass through both, logged driver stability across Mac and Windows, and actually mixed real sessions on the bundled plug ins to see whether they were professional tools or throwaway extras. That side by side is the only honest way to judge an interface at this level.
How we evaluated
I tracked the same vocal, acoustic guitar, and bass DI in both normal and Vintage modes and recorded both for A/B comparison. I ran the interface in daily use on a current MacBook Pro and a Windows 11 PC, logging any crashes or disconnects. I measured round trip latency at several buffer settings, connected it to a USB-C iPad for mobile recording sessions, and used the bundled UA Essentials plug ins on real mixing work to judge their quality rather than just confirming they install.
Vintage mode, the real reason to buy
The Vintage mode is the whole point of this interface, and it is implemented as analog circuitry rather than a digital model. It is a 610 style preamp curve baked into the input path that adds harmonic distortion and a slight midrange lift on the way in. On a dynamic vocal mic it added genuine presence and warmth that the Focusrite’s harmonic feature simply cannot match, because one is a real analog circuit and the other is a subtler effect.
The honest limitation is that Vintage mode is fixed. There is no intensity dial, no curve adjustment, no parameter control at all. It is on or off. If you want flexibility, modeled plug in preamps give you more options after the fact. But if what you want is one button to lay down analog character as you record, that is exactly what this does, and it does it well. At low gain the effect is subtle, at higher gain the character is clearly present and flattering.
Preamps in normal mode
In clean, non Vintage mode the Class A discrete preamps are good but not best in class, and I want to be straight about that. In an A/B against the Focusrite, the Focusrite is slightly cleaner and more transparent. The UA is a bit more colored even with Vintage off, with subtly more midrange weight to the sound. It is not a flaw so much as a voicing choice, but if your goal is absolute transparency, the Focusrite edges it.
For most home studio users who like a touch of warmth in their recordings, the UA’s clean mode is perfectly good and arguably more flattering on common sources. For someone tracking classical or jazz where any added character is unwanted, the cleaner Focusrite preamps are the better match. Know which camp you are in before you choose.
Software bundle, genuinely valuable
The bundled UA Essentials is not the usual pile of throwaway trial plug ins, and this is a real part of the value. It includes plug in versions of a classic optical compressor, a FET compressor, a plate reverb, and a tape echo, and these are professional tools that mix engineers actually use on real records. I ran them on actual mixing sessions, not a quick demo, and they held up as workhorses rather than novelties.
For a new home studio user, that bundle accelerates the learning curve enormously. Having credible emulations of the standard vocal and drum compressors as a starting point is exactly the right foundation, and it would cost a meaningful amount to buy that quality of processing separately. The software is a genuine reason the Volt makes sense over a cheaper interface that ships with less.
Drivers, iPad use, and build
Driver stability is the area where Focusrite still leads. On Mac the Volt’s driver was completely stable across six months with no issues. On Windows it was mostly stable but I had one driver related crash that a reinstall resolved, and the Focusrite Windows driver is simply more polished and mature. If you are a Windows user who values rock solid reliability above all, that is worth weighing.
Where the Volt shines is iPad. USB-C bus power means no adapter and no AC source for a USB-C iPad, and it is class compliant, so you plug in and apps see it immediately. Vintage mode and the onboard compression both work in iOS apps, which makes this one of the most fully featured interfaces in its range for mobile recording. On build, after six months of daily use there are no failures, no loose knobs, and no chassis issues. It feels solid.
Who should buy the Universal Audio Volt 2?
Buy this if you want analog warmth in your tracking without buying outboard gear, if you are a singer songwriter who wants vocal warmth on tap, and if you record on iPad and want full featured mobile recording. The genuinely useful UA Essentials bundle is another strong reason to choose it over a cheaper interface.
Skip this if you want the most reliable interface across both Mac and Windows, where the Focusrite has more mature drivers. Skip it if you are a beginner who needs Auto Gain, which the Volt lacks, and skip it if you record transparent classical or jazz where added character is unwanted.
The verdict
After six months side by side with the Focusrite, the Universal Audio Volt 2 is the interface I would recommend to anyone who specifically wants analog character. The Vintage mode delivers real 610 style warmth through analog circuitry, the bundled plug ins are professional tools rather than filler, and the iPad support is excellent. The Windows driver trails Focusrite and the clean preamps are a touch less transparent, but for singer songwriters and producers who value warmth, the Volt 2 is the answer.
How it compares
| Model | Best for | Rating | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Universal Audio Volt 2 | Best for Vintage Tone | 4.6 | Check price |
| Focusrite Scarlett 2i2 4th Gen | Editor's Choice Allrounder | 4.7 | Check price |
| Audient EVO 4 | Best Budget | 4.4 | Check price |
| Behringer U-Phoria UMC22 | Skip | 3.8 | Check price |
Full specifications
LIVE specs pulled from Amazon; performance specs from our testing.
Universal Audio Volt 2 FAQs
If you specifically want analog warmth in a home interface, yes. The Vintage mode is the headline feature and it delivers real 610-style character. The included UA Essentials software bundle (LA-2A, 1176, Pure Plate) is worth standalone. If you do not need vintage tone, the Focusrite Scarlett 2i2 4th Gen at this price is more reliable.
Different priorities. The Volt 2 has Vintage mode for baked-in analog character and a more useful software bundle. The Focusrite has cleaner preamps in normal mode, more reliable drivers (especially on Windows), and the useful Auto Gain feature. For singer-songwriters who want warmth, get the Volt 2. For producers who want transparent recording, the Focusrite.
It adds subtle harmonic distortion and a slight midrange emphasis that flatters most sources. On a Shure SM7B vocal it adds presence without harshness. On an acoustic guitar it adds body without muddiness. It is not a dramatic effect at low gain, but at higher gain settings the character is clearly present and pleasing.
Yes, for any serious mixing work. The LA-2A is a workhorse vocal compressor, the 1176LN is essential for drums and bass, the Pure Plate reverb is high quality, and the Galaxy Tape Echo adds warmth to delays. These are all professional plug-ins, not free trials. They alone justify the price difference over the Focusrite.
Excellent. USB-C bus power means no adapter or AC source needed for USB-C iPads. It is class-compliant on iOS, plug it in and apps see it. Vintage mode and 76 Compression both work in iOS apps. For mobile recording on iPad, this is the most fully featured interface in this price range.
Update log
- Jun 20, 2026: Review published.
- Jun 25, 2026: Current Amazon price and availability refreshed.
Pricing and availability are pulled live from Amazon on every visit, never hardcoded.

