Most audiophiles will tell you Bluetooth on a turntable is not worth doing. They are right for their setups. They are wrong as general advice. In six years setting up systems at a Chicago record store, the customers asking about Bluetooth were not the ones with a Rega and a dedicated listening room. They had a wireless speaker on the shelf and no interest in running cables across the apartment. That is a real use case and it deserves a real answer. Five Bluetooth turntables are covered here, from $259 to $649. No manufacturer provided review units. For wired options too, see the complete turntable guide.
AT-LP60XBT: Best Value Bluetooth Turntable
Audio-Technica AT-LP60XBT
Audio-Technica has been making this turntable in various forms since the early 2000s. The XBT version adds Bluetooth without breaking anything that worked before. Most Bluetooth turntables add wireless at the expense of build quality, cartridge, or phono stage implementation. The LP60XBT does not. What was already a solid record player for beginners is now a solid turntable with reliable wireless on top.
The aptX implementation pairs quickly and stays paired. In six years of watching customers struggle with turntable setups, the two things that derailed a Bluetooth pairing every time were codec mismatches and cheap chips that dropped out mid-side. Neither happens here. Pair it with a Sonos, Edifier powered speakers, or any Bluetooth headphones that support aptX and you get clean, reliable wireless playback with no dropout in normal use.
Sony PS-LX310BT: The Proven Legacy Pick
Sony PS-LX310BT
The PS-LX310BT launched in 2019 at $249.99 and held that price for years. Sony replaced it with new 2026 models and the current Amazon price is $448 as remaining stock clears. At that price the AT-LP3xBT at $379 is the more sensible buy: newer Bluetooth standard, better cartridge upgrade path, and $69 cheaper. The PS-LX310BT only makes sense at $448 if the three gain levels matter specifically for your setup, or if you prefer its particular sound character.
The price fluctuates. During Prime Day 2024 it dropped to $178. During Black Friday 2025 it dropped to $198. If you see it below $280 that changes the calculation completely and it becomes the best value on this list. Use a price tracker like CamelCamelCamel and set an alert for $250. At that price, buy it immediately.
AT-LP3xBT: The Step Up
Audio-Technica AT-LP3xBT
The AT-LP3xBT is the most logical upgrade from the LP60XBT. The VM95 cartridge platform it ships on accepts every stylus in Audio-Technica’s range: VM95E, VM95EN, VM95ML, up to the Shibata. When this stylus wears out, drop in a better one without touching the mounting hardware or realigning. The Sony turntables at similar prices lock you into their own cartridge ecosystem. This one keeps your options open for years. Our best cartridges guide covers the full VM95 upgrade path in detail.
This model also ships with aptX Adaptive, the same Bluetooth standard found on the new Sony PS-LX3BT at $398. Getting it at $379 on a turntable with a genuine cartridge upgrade path makes it the better deal for most buyers.
Sony PS-LX3BT: Best New Bluetooth Turntable of 2026
Sony PS-LX3BT
Sony’s first new turntable in seven years has the best Bluetooth implementation on this list. aptX Adaptive supports 96kHz/24-bit audio wirelessly, as documented in Sony’s official product specification. This is Hi-Res Wireless territory. If you own a speaker or headphone that supports aptX Adaptive, the wireless signal from this turntable is genuinely better than standard Bluetooth delivers.
The locked cartridge ecosystem is the real problem at $398. At $199 that restriction is understandable. At $398, you should be buying a turntable with a genuine upgrade path. If wireless quality is your primary criterion and cartridge upgrades are not on your radar, this is the best Bluetooth turntable at this price. If cartridge upgrades matter at all, buy the Pro-Ject T1 Evo BT instead.
Pro-Ject T1 Evo BT: Best Sound Quality
Pro-Ject T1 Evo BT
Pro-Ject has been making turntables in Europe since 1991. What Hi-Fi gave the T1 line five stars, noting the build quality is substantially ahead of anything at a comparable price. The T1 Evo BT is the current version and the improvement over previous generations is most audible in the low end: tighter bass, better timing, less noise from the plinth. The CNC-machined chassis with no hollow spaces is the reason. Plastic and hollow MDF ring. This one does not.
The Ortofon OM10 cartridge accepts any OM-series stylus: OM20, OM30, OM40, all drop straight in without realigning. You are buying a turntable with a genuine five-year upgrade trajectory. Keep your records clean before putting this stylus on them. Our how to clean vinyl records guide covers the full routine.
Does Bluetooth Actually Hurt Sound Quality?
Bluetooth introduces lossy compression into the signal path. Wired is always the more accurate path. The question is whether the degradation is audible in practice, and the answer depends entirely on the codec and the rest of the system.
Standard SBC, the default Bluetooth codec when nothing better is available, is audibly inferior to wired on a revealing system. aptX at 352kbps is very close to CD quality. Most listeners cannot identify it in a blind test against a wired connection through the same speakers. aptX Adaptive streams at up to 96kHz/24-bit. At that specification, the codec is not the bottleneck.
The practical verdict: if you are running a serious wired hi-fi system, do not add Bluetooth. Buy the wired version of whichever turntable you want and see our best phono preamps guide for what to pair it with. If you are running powered speakers, a wireless soundbar, or wireless headphones in a normal room, a Bluetooth turntable with aptX or above will sound fine. The cartridge and the record condition will have more impact on the sound than the codec.
aptX vs aptX Adaptive: What the Codecs Mean
Standard aptX transmits at 352kbps, close to CD quality. It is the minimum codec worth considering on a Bluetooth turntable. AAC is Apple’s equivalent. SBC, the default fallback, drops to 192 to 328kbps and loses high-frequency detail audibly on a decent speaker. Qualcomm’s aptX specification page covers the full technical comparison between codec tiers if you want the numbers.
aptX Adaptive adjusts dynamically between 276kbps and 420kbps depending on connection quality, and scales to 96kHz/24-bit on compatible hardware. It is available on the Sony PS-LX3BT and the AT-LP3xBT. The catch is that both the turntable and the speaker or headphone must support aptX Adaptive to benefit. Connecting an aptX Adaptive turntable to a standard aptX speaker drops the connection back to standard aptX.
For most setups, aptX is sufficient. Check whether your wireless speakers support aptX before deciding that aptX Adaptive is a meaningful upgrade for your situation.
Frequently Asked Questions
Yes, for the right use case. If your speakers or headphones are wireless, or if you want to play records without running cables, a Bluetooth turntable with aptX support is a practical and sonically acceptable solution. If you are running a wired hi-fi setup, buy a wired turntable and spend the saved money on a better cartridge or phono stage.
In practice, with aptX or above, the difference between Bluetooth and wired is inaudible to most listeners through most speakers in a normal room. Standard SBC Bluetooth is audibly worse. aptX Adaptive streams at up to 96kHz/24-bit and is not a meaningful bottleneck. The cartridge and record condition will affect your sound more than the codec.
The Audio-Technica AT-LP60XBT at around $259 (currently on sale from $299). Fully automatic, aptX and AAC support, built-in phono preamp, and reliable Bluetooth pairing. The Sony PS-LX310BT is worth considering if its price drops below $280 during a sale event.
Yes. A Bluetooth turntable pairs directly with any Bluetooth speaker the same way a phone does. For best results, make sure both support the same codec. aptX on both sides produces better results than falling back to SBC.
The AT-LP60XBT for most people. Fully automatic, built-in phono preamp, no setup decisions required. If you want better sound and can spend around $120 more, the AT-LP3xBT ships with a better cartridge platform and the same ease of use.
Only by adding a Bluetooth transmitter to the turntable output. The result is usually lower quality than a dedicated Bluetooth turntable because the transmitter adds another conversion stage. Buying a Bluetooth-equipped turntable is the cleaner solution.
James Calloway has been collecting vinyl for 22 years and spent six of them working behind the counter at an independent record store in Chicago. In that time he set up systems at every price point from $150 to well over $2,000, including more Bluetooth turntable setups than he would have chosen voluntarily. He writes all turntable reviews and gear guides for VinylPickup.com. No manufacturer sends products to this site. No brand has any input into what gets written about their products.





