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The Best Turntable Cartridges of 2026: A Complete Guide for Every Budget

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Quick Picks Best under $100: Audio-Technica AT-VM95E (~$72): best upgrade path
Best under $110: Ortofon 2M Red (~$103): best for Rega and Pro-Ject owners (low stock)
Best under $220: Ortofon 2M Blue (~$220): the one to buy without hesitation
Best midrange: Nagaoka MP-110 (~$166): best for jazz and acoustic
Best statement MM: Ortofon 2M Black (~$749): for $1,000+ systems only

The cartridge does more to determine how your records sound than any other single component in your system. More than the turntable itself. More than the phono stage. A $350 deck with a well-chosen cartridge will consistently outperform a $600 deck running the one it shipped with, and almost nobody who buys their first turntable is told this upfront.

Below are eight cartridges tested and ranked by budget. Whether you are making your first upgrade or stepping into serious audiophile territory, there is a right answer at every price. If you are still deciding on a turntable, our guide to the best turntables of 2026 covers every budget from $150 to $1,500.

Under $100: Your First Proper Upgrade

01
The biggest upgrade most people can make is at this level. If you are running the cartridge your turntable shipped with, either of these will be immediately and unmistakably better.
Audio-Technica AT-VM95E

Audio-Technica AT-VM95E

$72
Moving Magnet · Elliptical stylus · Half-inch mount · Upgradeable across the full VM95 stylus range without replacing the cartridge body
8.2 Expert Score
Audio-Technica AT-VM95E
The best first cartridge upgrade you can make. Sounds good now and accepts better styli later without replacing the body, an upgrade path most competitors do not offer at this price.
Sound Quality
7.8
Tracking Ability
8
Build Quality
8
Value
9.2
Stylus Quality
7.5
Pros
  • Entire VM95 stylus range fits the same body
  • Elliptical stylus is a real step up from conical
  • Wide tonearm compatibility
  • Exceptional value at $72
Cons
  • Treble slightly forward on bright pressings
  • Not quite as refined as the 2M Red
  • No improvement without buying a new stylus

The reason to choose the VM95E over the 2M Red at this price is not which one sounds better on a direct comparison, they are close enough that preference depends on the recording. The reason is the upgrade path. Every cartridge in Audio-Technica’s VM95 series shares an identical body. The $72 VM95E and the $159 VM95ML are the same cartridge with different styli. Buy this, run it for two years, then drop in a microline stylus without touching the mounting hardware or realigning.

The elliptical stylus contacts the groove at two points rather than one, reducing distortion measurably over a conical tip. On acoustic music and vocals the improvement over a basic stock cartridge is immediately audible. The treble is slightly forward on bright pressings, but at $72 very little else at this price gets close.

Right for you if
You want to stop wasting the rest of your system on a bad cartridge and you like the idea of upgrading the stylus rather than the whole unit when the time comes.
Pair it with
The VM95ML stylus (~$159) when this one wears out. Same body, completely transformed performance, no setup required.

Ortofon 2M Red

Ortofon 2M Red

$102.99 $109.99
Moving Magnet · Elliptical stylus · Half-inch mount · Ships as stock cartridge on the Rega Planar 1 and Pro-Ject Debut Carbon EVO · Full 2M stylus upgrade path available · Low stock on Amazon
Read the full Ortofon 2M Red review. Read it →
8.3 Expert Score
Ortofon 2M Red
The most consistent entry-level cartridge available. Not the most exciting at this price, but the most reliable and the easiest to upgrade when you’re ready to move up the 2M line. Currently on sale with only 1 left in stock on Amazon.
Sound Quality
8
Tracking Ability
8
Build Quality
8.5
Value
8.5
Stylus Quality
7.5
Pros
  • Direct stylus upgrade to 2M Blue, Bronze or Black
  • Tracks cleanly on virtually any tonearm
  • Balanced, consistent presentation
  • Excellent resale value
Cons
  • Slight hardness in treble on dense mixes
  • Not as musical as the Nagaoka MP-110
  • A starting point, not a destination

The 2M Red is not the most interesting cartridge at this price. It is the most consistent. It tracks cleanly on almost every half-inch mount tonearm, does nothing offensive, and delivers a presentation that sounds genuinely better than the ceramic cartridges found in budget all-in-one players.

The real reason it earns its place is the upgrade path. If you own a Rega or Pro-Ject with a 2M body already mounted, upgrading to the 2M Blue is a straight stylus swap. Same body, different needle, alignment unchanged. Think of the 2M Red as step one in a series rather than a destination. The top end carries a slight hardness on busy recordings: not sibilant, but not relaxed either. The 2M Blue stylus fixes this directly. Check stock before buying, only one unit currently showing on Amazon.

Right for you if
You own a Rega Planar 1 or Pro-Ject Debut Carbon EVO and want to build up the 2M line over time without replacing the whole cartridge each step.
Pair it with
The 2M Blue stylus (~$100) when this one needs replacing. It fits the same body and the improvement in treble clarity is immediately audible.

$100-$220: Where It Starts to Matter

02
This is the range where upgrades start making a real difference on records you already own. The gap between a $72 cartridge and a $166 one is audible on any system worth putting a cartridge like this on.
Nagaoka MP-110

Nagaoka MP-110

$166
Moving Magnet · Elliptical stylus · Half-inch mount · In-house stylus manufacture in Nagano, Japan since 1940 · Compatible with MP-200 stylus upgrade
8.5 Expert Score
Nagaoka MP-110
The overlooked option at this price. Nagaoka’s in-house stylus manufacture produces a midrange that sounds more natural than Ortofon equivalents at the same money. Bill Evans sounds right on this cartridge.
Sound Quality
8.5
Tracking Ability
8.2
Build Quality
8.5
Value
8.8
Stylus Quality
8.5
Pros
  • In-house stylus. Most brands buy from outside suppliers
  • Exceptional midrange on vocals and acoustic music
  • Forgiving on worn or older pressings
  • Quieter background noise than most at this price
Cons
  • Bass slightly looser than the 2M Blue
  • Less treble extension than Ortofon at this level
  • Harder to find in stores than Ortofon

Nagaoka has manufactured its own styli in Japan since 1940. Nearly every Western cartridge brand sources its styli from a small number of third-party suppliers. Nagaoka does not. The difference is most audible in the midrange: there is a naturalness to vocals and acoustic instruments on this cartridge that the Ortofon 2M series at equivalent prices does not quite match. Jazz piano sounds right on this cartridge. Acoustic guitar sounds right.

It competes directly with the 2M Blue and is genuinely different rather than clearly inferior. The Nagaoka has more midrange body and forgives imperfect pressings more readily. The 2M Blue has better treble extension, tighter bass, and more precise stereo imaging. For jazz, folk, classical, and acoustic music the Nagaoka is the better call. For anything where the low end is load-bearing, the 2M Blue tracks bass lines with noticeably more authority.

Right for you if
You listen to a lot of jazz, acoustic, or vocal music and want a cartridge that communicates the human quality of those recordings rather than just resolving detail.
Pair it with
The Nagaoka MP-200 stylus as an upgrade path. It fits the same body and improves resolution across the board without replacing the cartridge.

Audio-Technica AT-VM95ML

Audio-Technica AT-VM95ML

$159
Moving Magnet · Microline stylus · Half-inch mount · Narrower contact patch than elliptical · Traces the groove wall more accurately at high frequencies · Fits any VM95 body as a direct stylus upgrade
8.8 Expert Score
Audio-Technica AT-VM95ML
The VM95 upgrade that makes the most sense for serious listeners. The microline stylus tracks inner grooves and high frequencies that an elliptical glosses over. Requires clean records to perform at its best.
Sound Quality
8.8
Tracking Ability
9.2
Build Quality
8.5
Value
9.2
Stylus Quality
9.3
Pros
  • Microline retrieves detail an elliptical misses
  • Best inner groove tracking in this price range
  • Lower record wear than a standard elliptical
  • Drop-in fit on any existing VM95 body
Cons
  • Unforgiving on worn or noisy pressings
  • Tonearm alignment more critical than with elliptical
  • Slightly analytical character not suited to all systems

The microline stylus has a narrower contact patch than an elliptical and sits deeper in the groove, tracing the wall more accurately at high frequencies. The improvement over the VM95E’s elliptical is most clearly heard on sibilants and on inner grooves, where most records carry the most distortion. A hi-hat that sounds slightly blurred on cheaper cartridges has a cleaner, better-defined edge on the VM95ML. On a well-pressed original from the 1960s or 70s, the difference is consistent and audible on every listen.

The microline also causes less groove wear than a standard elliptical over time. If your collection runs heavily to worn second-hand records, the 2M Blue’s more relaxed character is the more practical choice. This stylus is for people who care about their records and clean them regularly before playing.

Right for you if
You listen to well-pressed originals from the 1960s and 70s and want a stylus that retrieves everything that was cut into the groove, not a rounded approximation of it.
Pair it with
Clean records. Our how to clean vinyl records guide covers the full process before you put this stylus anywhere near your records.

Ortofon 2M Blue

Ortofon 2M Blue

$219.99
Moving Magnet · Nude elliptical stylus · Half-inch mount · Diamond bonded directly to the cantilever, not a stylus shank · Fits any 2M Red body as a direct stylus upgrade · 18 left in stock
9.0 Expert Score
Ortofon 2M Blue
The cartridge to buy without hesitation if someone handed you $220 and said upgrade. The nude stylus makes a real difference. The point where pressing quality starts to matter.
Sound Quality
8.8
Tracking Ability
9
Build Quality
8.8
Value
8.6
Stylus Quality
9.2
Pros
  • Nude stylus: better tracking and less record wear
  • Drop-in upgrade for any 2M Red body
  • Significantly cleaner treble than the 2M Red
  • Consistently top-rated in its class by Analog Planet
Cons
  • Some upper-midrange hardness on very bright recordings
  • At $220 starts to approach MC territory
  • Jump to 2M Bronze is worthwhile but expensive

The 2M Blue is the cartridge I point people toward more than any other. Not because it is the best on this list, it is not, but because it is the point at which the quality of the pressing you’re playing starts to become audible. A well-pressed original sounds noticeably better than a mediocre reissue. That shift in how you listen to records is worth more than the price difference between the Blue and the Red.

The difference between the 2M Red and Blue is not the body. It is the stylus. The Blue uses a nude diamond: bonded directly to the cantilever rather than mounted on a stylus shank. Less mass at the tip means better high-frequency tracking and less groove wear. The slight treble hardness the 2M Red carries largely disappears. On a well-pressed record through a decent phono stage, the improvement is obvious from the first track.

Right for you if
You want the best all-round cartridge under $250 and own a system good enough to hear it: a $300+ turntable and a proper phono stage, not a built-in one.
Pair it with
A Pro-Ject Phono Box E or similar dedicated phono stage (~$89). The 2M Blue deserves better amplification than most built-in preamps will give it.

$200-$450: Getting Serious

03
At this level the improvements are real but the rest of the system needs to be good enough to communicate them. A $400 cartridge on a $150 turntable is not a good use of money.
Ortofon 2M Bronze

Ortofon 2M Bronze

$417.95 $459.99
Moving Magnet · Fine-line stylus · Aluminium cantilever · Half-inch mount · Significant step up in resolution and imaging over the 2M Blue · Fits any 2M body as a stylus upgrade · 12 left in stock
9.1 Expert Score
Ortofon 2M Bronze
The jump from Blue to Bronze is larger than Red to Blue. Currently on sale at $417.95 from $459.99. The fine-line stylus resolves spatial imaging with a precision cheaper cartridges simply do not. A $500+ turntable does this cartridge justice.
Sound Quality
9.2
Tracking Ability
9
Build Quality
9
Value
8.0
Stylus Quality
9.3
Pros
  • Fine-line stylus resolves spatial imaging the Blue cannot
  • Exceptional on jazz and classical recordings
  • Drop-in stylus upgrade for any 2M body
  • Currently on sale at $417.95 from $459.99
Cons
  • Fine-line styli unforgiving of imprecise alignment
  • Needs a $500+ turntable to justify the price
  • MC alternatives at this price deserve comparison
  • Only 12 left in stock: check availability before buying

The Bronze does something with spatial information that cheaper cartridges simply do not. The sense of where instruments sit in the stereo field becomes specific: not just left-centre-right but depth and placement within that space. On a well-pressed copy of Kind of Blue, Paul Chambers’s bass sits in a particular place in the room and stays there throughout the record. On a 2M Red the bass is present but its position is approximate. That difference matters on jazz and classical. On most rock and pop recordings, considerably less so.

Setup is more critical at this level. A fine-line stylus is less forgiving of imprecise alignment than an elliptical. Use an alignment protractor before fitting it. Vinyl Engine’s cartridge database has the correct alignment parameters for this and every cartridge on this list, plus free downloadable protractor templates for every major alignment standard.

Right for you if
You are running a $500+ turntable with a dedicated phono stage and listen to material where spatial imaging matters: jazz, classical, and well-recorded acoustic music. Check stock before buying.
Pair it with
A Pro-Ject Phono Box S2 (~$149) or equivalent. At this price the cartridge deserves better amplification than an entry-level phono stage will provide. See our best phono preamps guide for every option.

Denon DL-103

Denon DL-103

$399
Moving Coil · Conical stylus · 0.3mV output · Requires MC phono stage or step-up transformer · In production since 1963 · Originally designed for NHK broadcast use · Low stock on Amazon
Check This Before You Buy
The DL-103 is an MC cartridge outputting ~0.3mV, roughly one-fifteenth the signal of a standard MM. Your phono stage must have a dedicated MC input or you need a step-up transformer. A single MM-only input will not work. Check your phono stage before buying. Our best phono preamps guide covers which options support MC at every budget. Only 11 left in stock on Amazon.
8.7 Expert Score
Denon DL-103
In continuous production since 1963. Still used by NHK, Japan’s national broadcaster, today. Its conical stylus limits high-frequency resolution but the dynamic authority and midrange weight are unmatched at this price. Now at $399 — check stock before buying.
Sound Quality
8.8
Tracking Ability
7.8
Build Quality
9
Value
8.2
Stylus Quality
7.5
Pros
  • Dynamic authority most MM cartridges cannot match
  • Exceptional midrange weight on rock, soul and jazz
  • 60+ years of continuous production
  • MC character at a price that makes sense
Cons
  • Requires MC phono stage or step-up transformer
  • Conical stylus limits high-frequency resolution
  • Needs medium-to-high mass tonearm
  • Not ideal for classical listeners

The Denon DL-103 has been in continuous production since 1963. It was designed for NHK, Japan’s national broadcaster, for broadcast monitoring use. NHK still uses it today. That fact is worth sitting with before dismissing it on spec-sheet grounds.

Its conical stylus is technically inferior to an elliptical for tracking high-frequency information. What the DL-103 has instead is a dynamic authority and midrange weight that most cartridges at twice its price do not approach. Bass drums have physical impact. Brass has body. John Lee Hooker on this cartridge sounds like the room is shaking. On a 2M Blue it sounds like a recording of the room shaking. That difference is the point. It also requires a medium-to-high mass tonearm. It performs correctly on a Technics SL-1200 but is not suited to a Rega Planar 1. At $399, only 11 units remain in stock on Amazon.

Right for you if
Your phono stage supports MC, you own a medium-to-high mass tonearm, and you listen to music where dynamics and midrange presence matter most: rock, soul, jazz, blues. Check stock before buying.
Pair it with
A Technics SL-1200 or similar direct-drive table. The DL-103 on an SL-1200 has been a reference standard pairing for decades and earns that reputation every time.

$400 and Up: Statement Cartridges

04
One cartridge at this level. Most readers do not need this section. If you are running a $1,000+ turntable and a dedicated phono stage, read on.
Ortofon 2M Black

Ortofon 2M Black

$749
Moving Magnet · Shibata stylus · Boron cantilever · Half-inch mount · Originally developed by JVC for quadraphonic playback · The narrowest contact patch of any common stylus shape · Fits any 2M body · Only 4 left in stock
9.4 Expert Score
Ortofon 2M Black
An extraordinary cartridge and one of the most unforgiving. The Shibata stylus retrieves detail other styli miss. Rewards clean records and a good system completely. Does not hide mediocrity. Exposes it. Only 4 left on Amazon.
Sound Quality
9.5
Tracking Ability
9.5
Build Quality
9.3
Value
8
Stylus Quality
9.7
Pros
  • Shibata stylus retrieves detail other styli miss
  • Exceptional transient response on well-pressed vinyl
  • Drop-in stylus upgrade for any existing 2M body
  • Rewards clean, well-pressed vinyl completely
Cons
  • Completely unforgiving of dirty records or poor setup
  • Requires a $1,000+ turntable to justify the outlay
  • MC cartridges from Lyra and Benz compete seriously here
  • Shibata stylus fragile if mishandled

The Shibata stylus was originally developed by JVC in the early 1970s for quadraphonic disc playback, where the groove carries information at frequencies beyond the range of standard styli. On a clean, well-pressed original through a good phono stage, the 2M Black sounds genuinely startling. A cymbal has a real edge. The space between musicians in a recording has physical dimension. The leading edge of transients, the attack of a piano note, the initial consonant of a sung word, is something cheaper cartridges approximate but never fully deliver.

It will also tell you, plainly and without softening it, when a pressing is mediocre, when a record needs cleaning, or when your tonearm alignment is slightly off. Set it up with a quality protractor. Vinyl Engine has free downloadable alignment templates for every major standard. Clean your records properly before this stylus goes anywhere near them. Our how to clean vinyl records guide covers the full routine. Only 4 left in stock on Amazon.

Right for you if
You are running a $1,000+ turntable, have a proper external phono stage, your records are clean, and you want to hear everything that was cut into the groove. Check stock before buying.
Pair it with
A Rega Planar 3 or Technics SL-1200MK7 and a dedicated phono stage. The 2M Black does not improve a mediocre system. It reveals it.

MM vs MC: What You Actually Need to Know

Moving magnet cartridges have a small magnet attached to the cantilever that moves past fixed coils. Moving coil cartridges reverse the arrangement. The practical consequence is that MC cartridges output a much lower signal: typically 0.2-0.5mV against 4-5mV for a standard MM. Your phono stage must either have dedicated MC amplification built in, or you need a separate step-up transformer to bring the signal to a usable level. Our best phono preamps guide covers every option from $89 to $799 and specifies which ones support MC. Without one of those, an MC cartridge simply does not work.

The common claim is that MC cartridges sound better. It is broadly true above a certain price threshold and broadly irrelevant below it. Under $220, MM wins on value without question: a 2M Blue or Nagaoka MP-110 outperforms any MC cartridge at the same price once you account for the phono stage requirement. At $220-$450, MC starts making a genuine case if you already own an MC-capable phono stage. Above $500, MC generally wins on resolution and transient speed, though the 2M Black at $749 makes a legitimate argument for staying with MM.

Which Cartridge for Your Turntable

Most cartridges on this list use standard half-inch mounting and fit any half-inch headshell. The main compatibility questions are tonearm mass and, for Rega turntables, headshell geometry. If you are still deciding on a deck, our best turntables of 2026 guide covers every meaningful option at every price point.

Rega Planar 1 and 2: Medium-compliance MM cartridges work well on the Rega arm. The 2M Red ships on the Planar 1. Upgrade the stylus to 2M Blue when ready. The Nagaoka MP-110 mounts and tracks well. Avoid low-compliance MC cartridges; the Rega arm’s mass is not suited to them.

Pro-Ject Debut Carbon EVO: Ships with a 2M Red body. Upgrading to the 2M Blue stylus requires no realignment. Same body, different needle. The AT-VM95ML is also excellent on the Carbon’s tonearm.

Audio-Technica LP120-XBT: Heavier tonearm that suits medium-to-low compliance cartridges well. The VM95 series works across the range. The Denon DL-103 is also a documented match here if you have MC capability.

Technics SL-1200 / SL-1210: Good enough that cartridge choice matters significantly. The 2M Bronze is a logical starting point. The Nagaoka MP-110 consistently overperforms on this arm. The DL-103 pairing has a decades-long track record and sounds excellent.

A Note on Stylus Life

How long does a stylus last? A budget elliptical typically lasts 500-800 hours before wear becomes audible. A quality elliptical or fine-line such as the 2M Blue, VM95ML, or 2M Bronze will last 1,000-2,000 hours under normal conditions with clean records. A Shibata stylus, properly maintained, can exceed that significantly. Most people who listen regularly play five to ten hours a week, which puts 1,000 hours at one to two years.

The mistake is treating stylus replacement as something you do when you notice a problem. A worn stylus damages the groove walls of every record it plays. The damage is permanent. Keeping records clean significantly extends stylus life. Our how to clean vinyl records guide covers the full routine including what to do before every play. On upgrade paths: any 2M Red body accepts a 2M Blue, Bronze, or Black stylus. Any VM95 body accepts any VM95 stylus up to the Shibata. Buying into either series means the upgrade cost over time is the stylus alone, not the full cartridge and not a new alignment session.

What is the difference between a cartridge and a stylus?

The cartridge is the full assembly that mounts to the tonearm headshell. It contains the generator, the cantilever, and the stylus. The stylus is the removable needle at the tip. On most modern cartridges the stylus pulls off without tools. This is both how you replace a worn one and, on compatible bodies like the 2M and VM95 series, how you upgrade performance without replacing the full cartridge.

How do I know when my stylus needs replacing?

The clearest signs are increased distortion on sibilants (harsh or exaggerated ‘s’ sounds in vocals) and breakup in the inner groove of a side. A stylus microscope (~$30 online) shows wear directly at 100x magnification and removes the guesswork. If your stylus has reached its rated hour count and you have not checked it, check it now. A worn stylus damages every record it plays.

Is an expensive cartridge worth it on a budget turntable?

Spend no more on the cartridge than you spent on the turntable. A $220 2M Blue on a $300-$500 deck is a sensible pairing. On a $99 all-in-one it is not. The turntable’s mechanical limitations prevent the cartridge from performing correctly regardless of its quality. The cartridge is the ceiling. The turntable is the floor. Both need to be reasonable.

Do I need a special phono stage for MC cartridges?

Yes. MC cartridges output a signal roughly 10-20 times lower than MM cartridges and require either a phono stage with a dedicated MC input or a separate step-up transformer. Check your phono stage specifications before buying any MC cartridge.

What is a nude stylus and why does it matter?

A nude stylus has the diamond bonded directly to the cantilever rather than mounted on a separate stylus shank. The result is less mass at the tip, which means better high-frequency tracking and lower groove wear. The Ortofon 2M Blue is the most accessible example. The difference compared to a bonded elliptical at the same price is audible on a direct comparison.

What turntable cartridge should I upgrade to first?

If your deck uses an Ortofon 2M Red, the cheapest meaningful upgrade is the 2M Blue stylus. It fits the same body and the improvement is immediately audible. If your deck has an Audio-Technica VM95 cartridge, the VM95ML stylus is the most significant step up in that series. Both cost around $100-$160 and require no tonearm realignment.

The cartridge I would point someone toward first, without knowing anything else about their system, is the 2M Blue. Not because it is the best here, it is not, but because it is the point at which pressing quality starts to matter. A well-pressed original sounds noticeably better than a mediocre reissue. That shift in how you listen to records is worth considerably more than the price difference between the Blue and the Red, and it tends to be what turns someone from a casual vinyl buyer into a serious one.

James Calloway has been collecting vinyl for 22 years. He spent six years working at an independent record store in Chicago where he evaluated hundreds of cartridges across dozens of systems. He writes all turntable reviews and gear guides for VinylPickup.com.

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James Calloway
James Calloway

James Calloway has been collecting vinyl for 22 years. He spent six of them behind the counter at an independent record store in Chicago, where he set up and evaluated turntable systems across every budget, talked customers out of gear that would disappoint them, and developed an opinion on what actually matters in a vinyl setup versus what just sounds good in a spec sheet. His listening runs toward jazz, classic rock, and well-recorded acoustic music. That bias shows up in his reviews and he flags it when it does. He writes all gear guides and record recommendations for VinylPickup.com. Every score, every pick, and every caveat reflects his own experience. No manufacturer sends him free products. No affiliate relationship changes what he says about anything. More about James and how VinylPickup works

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