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No-Money Music · Recording · Gear

How to Treat a Bedroom Studio for Cheap

By a working Nashville songwriter & producer

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The cheapest upgrade to your sound isn't a new mic — it's killing the echo bouncing around your room. A $100 mic in a treated closet beats a $400 mic in a bare bedroom, every time. Here's how to fix your room for almost nothing, plus the myth that wastes everyone's money.

Myth first: foam is not soundproofing

Let's kill the big one. Acoustic foam does not stop sound from leaving the room — that's soundproofing, and it's expensive construction work. What foam does is treat the room: it tames the echoes and reflections that make home recordings sound boxy and amateur. That's the part that actually affects your tracks — so that's what we'll fix.

The free moves (do these first)

Record in the smallest, softest space you have. A closet packed with clothes is a free, dead-sounding vocal booth. Soft furniture, rugs, and a bookshelf all absorb reflections. Get the mic away from bare walls. This costs $0 and gets you most of the way.

The cheap buys, in the order that matters

What I'd do first: record in a closet, hang a couple of moving blankets, done — for $20. Add foam and a reflection filter when you want a cleaner result. You'll hear the difference before you spend a cent on a new mic.

Treated your room? Now the gear pays off — see the best home vocal mics or build the whole thing with the $200 studio guide.

Want the Whole Blueprint?

Gear is one piece. The full step-by-step system for building a real music career with no budget lives in the book — and every pick above lives on the free tools page.

THE TIP JAR

Everything in this house is free, built by one working songwriter. If something in here made you money — or saved you some — throw a buck in the jar on your way out. Musicians tip musicians.

Throw In a Buck →