Sony PS-LX310BT Review 2026: The Best Automatic Bluetooth Turntable

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Sony PS-LX310BT Review 2026

Sony PS-LX310BT Automatic Bluetooth Turntable

Most turntable reviews are written for people who want to get the most from their records. This one is written for people who want to press one button and hear music. Not everyone wants to hand-cue a tonearm. Not everyone wants to think about phono preamps or cartridge tracking force. The Sony PS-LX310BT exists for those people, and within that brief it does its job well. The complication in 2026 is the price. Sony launched this deck in 2019 at $249 and has since replaced it with new models. The PS-LX310BT now costs $448 as remaining stock clears. That changes the recommendation significantly. For context on where every deck sits at every price, see the best turntables guide.

Quick Verdict

Quick Verdict: Sony PS-LX310BT 2026
7.8/10. The easiest turntable on the site to operate. Fully automatic, aptX Bluetooth, built-in preamp with three gain settings, USB output. At $249 it was the best first deck for anyone who wants Bluetooth and automatic operation in one box. At $448 current price the AT-LP120XUSB at $399 is the better buy. Sony’s replacement, the PS-LX3BT at $399, is the correct current recommendation for this use case. Set a price alert. Below $280 this becomes the best value on the site again.
Sony PS-LX310BT automatic Bluetooth turntable

Sony PS-LX310BT Belt Drive Turntable

$448
~$448 · Belt drive · Fully automatic · aptX Bluetooth · Built-in preamp (3-level gain) · USB output · AT3600L cartridge · 33/45 RPM · Being discontinued

Specs

Quick Specs Sony PS-LX310BT
Price ~$448 (was $249 at launch)
Drive Type Belt drive
Operation Fully automatic (auto start, stop and return)
Speeds 33 1/3 and 45 RPM only
Tonearm Straight aluminium, pre-aligned
Cartridge AT3600L moving magnet, spherical diamond stylus
Tracking Force 3.0g (fixed, no adjustment)
Platter Die-cast aluminium with rubber mat
Bluetooth Yes — SBC and aptX (no AAC or LDAC)
Built-in Preamp Yes — switchable PHONO/LINE, 3-level gain
USB Output Yes — USB-B for vinyl ripping
78 RPM No
Warranty 1 year
Status Being discontinued — replaced by PS-LX3BT ($399)

Pros and Cons

Positive
  • Fully automatic: tonearm lowers, finds the groove, lifts at the end — nothing to touch or learn
  • aptX Bluetooth: pairs to speakers and headphones at 352kbps, close to CD quality wirelessly
  • Built-in preamp with 3-level gain switch: solves the volume mismatch problem most single-gain preamps create
  • USB output: rip vinyl to computer via Audacity without buying anything extra
  • Fully assembled and pre-aligned from the factory: belt, platter, play
Negatives
  • Being discontinued: Sony replaced it with the PS-LX3BT at $399 — a better deck at a lower price
  • At $448 current price the AT-LP120XUSB at $399 is better value
  • Bluetooth pairs only with speakers and headphones — not with phones, TVs or computers
  • Cartridge has no upgrade path: stylus is replaceable but the body cannot accept third-party alternatives
  • No 78 RPM support
  • Spherical stylus: less groove detail than the elliptical styli on the AT-LP120XUSB and Orbit Plus

Design and Build

01
Lightweight black plastic. Nothing about the build is impressive. Nothing about it is embarrassing either. It feels like what it costs at its original $249 price point.

The PS-LX310BT is not a heavy deck. Picking it up after the U-Turn Orbit Plus makes the weight difference obvious immediately. The plinth is black plastic, clean and minimal, with controls kept to essentials: start/stop button on the front, Bluetooth pairing button on the left, PHONO/LINE switch and gain selector on the rear panel. The aluminium die-cast platter is a genuine improvement over the pressed steel platters found on cheaper decks and spins without wobble. The dust cover is thick and hinged properly. None of this is premium, but none of it is poor either. What Hi-Fi noted it feels lightweight for what is going on inside it, which is a fair summary.

The tonearm is a straight aluminium pipe, pre-aligned and pre-mounted with the AT3600L cartridge at the factory. Running a finger along it, it feels solid rather than hollow — better than the visual impression suggests. The automatic mechanism underneath is what you are really paying for here. Watching it work for the first time after years of hand-cueing every other deck on this site is genuinely disorienting: the arm lifts, swings out over the record, descends slowly onto the groove, and the music starts. Nothing asked of you. At the end of the side it lifts again, returns to the rest, and stops the motor. For six years I lowered a tonearm by hand every time I played a record. This deck makes that feel like unnecessary effort. Whether that is appealing or alienating depends entirely on why you play records.

Setup

02
The fastest setup of any deck reviewed on this site. From box to first record in under five minutes.

In the box: the plinth, the aluminium platter, the rubber mat, the drive belt, RCA cables, a USB-B cable, power adapter, 45 RPM adapter, and dust cover. The tonearm is installed and pre-aligned. Attach the platter, hook the belt around the motor spindle, connect the RCA cables to your speakers or amplifier, set the PHONO/LINE switch correctly on the rear panel, and press play. That is the entire setup. There is no counterweight to balance, no anti-skate to set, no stylus guard to remove.

Sony PS-LX310BT setup walkthrough: watch before first use

Two things the video covers that are worth noting. First, the belt: seat it flat on the motor spindle before placing the platter. A belt that sits crooked will cause speed instability from the first play. Second, the dust cover hinges: they slide into the slots at the rear corners of the plinth and click in. Do not force them — if they resist, check the angle. For Bluetooth pairing, press the Bluetooth button on the left of the plinth until the indicator flashes, then put your speaker or headphones into pairing mode. It connects in under thirty seconds.

PHONO/LINE switch — set this first
On the rear panel, set PHONO when connecting to an amplifier with a dedicated phono input. Set LINE when connecting to powered speakers or any AUX input. Running through two phono stages produces severe distortion. This is the single most common setup error with this deck.
How this review was conducted
The PS-LX310BT was evaluated over multiple listening sessions using both its built-in preamp at LINE output (Mid gain setting) into Edifier R1280DB powered speakers, and via external Pro-Ject Phono Box E BT5 preamp at LINE output. Bluetooth testing used aptX pairing directly to the same Edifier R1280DB speakers. Test records: The Clash London Calling, Fleetwood Mac Rumours, Bruce Springsteen Born to Run. The same setup was used for the AT-LP120XUSB and U-Turn Orbit Plus reviews for direct comparison. The turntable was purchased at standard retail price. No review unit was provided by Sony or any retailer.

Sound Quality

03
Wired through an external preamp it sounds better than it looks. The spherical stylus is the main limitation — warm and smooth, not resolving.

London Calling is my first reference record for any turntable at this price. Paul Simonon’s bass on the title track has weight and presence through the PS-LX310BT wired through the Pro-Ject Phono Box E BT5. Strummer’s vocals sit forward. The top end is forgiving of surface noise on older pressings. The spherical stylus on the AT3600L makes groove contact at a single point rather than the elongated contact patch of an elliptical stylus — the result shows on the opening guitar riff of the title track, where the string attack is slightly rounded rather than crisp. On the AT-LP120XUSB the same moment has more edge. Neither is wrong, but the difference is consistent and audible on a decent pair of speakers.

Rumours tests stereo imaging. Christine McVie’s piano sits left, Buckingham’s guitar right. The image is adequately wide. Born to Run is where the Sony is most comfortable — a record where midrange density and vocal presence are the point, and the PS-LX310BT delivers both without asking anything of the listener. Through its own built-in preamp at Mid gain the sound is slightly warmer with a marginally higher noise floor. Audible on quiet passages at high volume, not at normal listening levels.

Sony PS-LX310BT Bluetooth turntable

Sony PS-LX310BT Belt Drive Turntable

$448
Convinced? Check current price before reading on. ~$448 via Amazon, last checked April 2026.

The Bluetooth Question

04
aptX confirmed by Sony’s official FAQ. Works well in practice. One important limitation most buyers discover after purchase: this deck pairs only with speakers and headphones — not with phones, TVs or computers.

The Bluetooth on the PS-LX310BT supports aptX at 352kbps. Sony’s official FAQ confirms SBC and aptX only — no AAC, no LDAC. aptX is not a meaningful bottleneck at this level of source quality. In practice, paired to the Edifier R1280DB via aptX, the difference between wired and wireless on London Calling comes down to the opening guitar riff: wired has a fractionally cleaner string attack, wireless rounds it very slightly. At normal listening distance in a typical room, most listeners would not identify the difference unprompted. The codec is not the weak link — the spherical stylus is.

The limitation that surprises most buyers: the PS-LX310BT is a Bluetooth transmitter only. It pairs with speakers and headphones. It cannot pair with phones, TVs, or computers — Sony confirmed this explicitly in the FAQ. You press the button on the turntable to start playback. There is no app, no phone remote, no streaming control. For buyers who assumed they could control playback from a phone, this is a real disappointment and worth knowing before purchasing. What Hi-Fi noted the wireless connection is stable but loses some high-frequency air compared to wired — consistent with what the Edifier pairing revealed on London Calling. For the full current picture on Bluetooth turntables including Sony’s new PS-LX3BT, see the best Bluetooth turntables guide.

The Gain Switch

05
Three settings: Low (-4dB), Mid (0dB), High (+6dB). Most buyers will set Mid and never touch it again. It solves a real problem that single-gain preamps create.

Vinyl records vary significantly in output level. A quiet 1960s pressing plays at a different volume than a hot 180g reissue. Most turntable preamps apply a fixed gain and leave the user to compensate with the volume knob. The PS-LX310BT’s three-level gain switch on the rear panel addresses this directly. Low (-4dB) is for amplifiers with a sensitive line input where the standard output causes distortion at normal listening levels. Mid (0dB) is correct for most powered speakers — on the Edifier R1280DB it produced clean output with no distortion across three different pressings of London Calling, Rumours, and Born to Run. High (+6dB) introduced subtle clipping on the loudest passages of Born to Run at normal listening volume. Set Mid and leave it there unless your system is specifically quiet or specifically sensitive.

Cartridge

The AT3600L is a Sony-branded Audio-Technica moving magnet cartridge with a spherical diamond stylus at 3.0 grams tracking force. Three grams is safe for records. The $89 Crosley alternatives track at 5 to 7 grams and physically grind the groove wall. This Sony does not. The stylus is replaceable with the ATN-3600L when it wears out — Sony’s own spare part, straightforward to swap. The limitation is that the cartridge body itself cannot accept third-party replacements. Sony’s FAQ confirms the tonearm is tuned specifically for the original cartridge. When you want meaningfully better sound from a cartridge upgrade, you buy a different turntable. For the full cartridge upgrade path on other decks, the AT-LP120XUSB and Orbit Plus both offer genuine progression this deck does not.

Who Should Buy

Buy the PS-LX310BT if
You find it at $280 or below — set a CamelCamelCamel price alert and buy immediately when it drops. It reached $178 during Prime Day 2024 and $198 during Black Friday 2025. At those prices it is the best value on the site for automatic Bluetooth operation. You need automatic operation and Bluetooth together in one deck right now at any price. Nothing else at this level offers both.
Do not buy the PS-LX310BT if
You want to upgrade the cartridge over time: no upgrade path exists. You want to pair it with your phone: Bluetooth pairs only with speakers and headphones, not phones. You want 78 RPM. You are comparing it to the AT-LP120XUSB at $399 and do not specifically need automatic operation: the AT is better value at current prices. Consider the new Sony PS-LX3BT at $399 instead — same automatic operation, aptX Adaptive Bluetooth, Sony’s current recommended replacement.

See the best turntables guide for where every deck sits in context. If you need a phono preamp rather than using the built-in stage, the best phono preamps guide covers every standalone option from $89 upward.

How It Compares

06
The Sony wins one thing clearly: ease of operation. On everything else the AT-LP120XUSB and Orbit Plus are stronger decks at the same or lower price.
Price
~$448
~$399
~$399
Operation
Automatic
Manual
Manual
Bluetooth
aptX
No
No
Built-in Preamp
Yes (3-level)
Yes
Optional (+$50)
USB Output
Yes
Yes
No
78 RPM
No
Yes
No
Cartridge Upgrade
No
Yes (VM95)
Yes (OM)
Warranty
1 year
1 year
3 years

The Sony wins one column clearly: automatic operation. No other deck at this price lowers the tonearm for you and returns it at the end. If that is the feature you are buying for, this remains the only option in this lineup. Everything else goes against it at the current price. The AT-LP120XUSB at $399 costs $49 less and has direct drive, an upgradeable cartridge, 78 RPM, and better long-term sound quality. The U-Turn Orbit Plus at $399 has a magnesium tonearm, acrylic platter, and a 3-year warranty. Neither has Bluetooth or automatic operation. The decision is simple: if you need automatic plus Bluetooth, buy the Sony when it drops below $280 or buy the new PS-LX3BT at $399 instead. If you do not specifically need both of those features, either of the other two decks is the better purchase at current prices.

Verdict: 7.8/10

The PS-LX310BT is a good turntable sold at the wrong price. At $249 it was the correct answer for anyone who wanted to press one button and hear music through their wireless speaker without learning anything about vinyl. At $448 the AT-LP120XUSB at $399 is better value and Sony’s own PS-LX3BT at $399 is the correct Sony recommendation for this use case. Set a CamelCamelCamel alert for $280 on ASIN B07PBLD4QN. When it drops — and it will as remaining stock clears — buy it without hesitation. Until then, the PS-LX3BT or the AT-LP120XUSB are the stronger choices.

Sony PS-LX310BT automatic Bluetooth turntable

Sony PS-LX310BT Belt Drive Turntable

$448
~$448 · Fully automatic · aptX Bluetooth · Built-in preamp · USB output · Expert Score: 7.8/10 · Worth buying below $280.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is the Sony PS-LX310BT still worth buying in 2026?

At $280 or below, yes without reservation. Set a CamelCamelCamel price alert — it dropped to $178 during Prime Day 2024 and $198 during Black Friday 2025. At those prices it is exceptional value. At $448 current price, the AT-LP120XUSB at $399 is better value for most buyers, and Sony’s own PS-LX3BT at $399 is the correct current recommendation if you specifically need automatic operation and Bluetooth together.

Can you pair the Sony PS-LX310BT with your phone?

No. The PS-LX310BT is a Bluetooth transmitter only and pairs exclusively with speakers and headphones. It cannot pair with phones, TVs, or computers. Sony confirmed this in the official FAQ. You press the button on the turntable to start playback — there is no phone control or app.

What Bluetooth codec does the Sony PS-LX310BT use?

SBC and aptX only. Not AAC or LDAC. Sony confirmed this in the official FAQ. aptX transmits at 352kbps, close to CD quality and not a meaningful bottleneck on this deck. The spherical stylus limits sound quality before the Bluetooth codec becomes relevant.

Can you upgrade the cartridge on the Sony PS-LX310BT?

The stylus is replaceable with Sony’s ATN-3600L when it wears out. The cartridge body itself cannot accept third-party alternatives — Sony’s FAQ confirms the tonearm is tuned specifically for the original cartridge. There is no upgrade path beyond the stock cartridge. When you want meaningfully better sound from a cartridge upgrade, you buy a different turntable.

What does the gain switch do on the Sony PS-LX310BT?

Three settings control the LINE output level of the built-in preamp. Low (-4dB) is for amplifiers with a sensitive line input. Mid (0dB) is correct for most powered speakers. High (+6dB) is for systems where the turntable signal sounds too quiet. Most buyers will set Mid and never touch it again.

How does the Sony PS-LX310BT compare to the AT-LP120XUSB?

The Sony wins on ease of use: fully automatic operation and aptX Bluetooth, nothing to learn or calibrate. The AT-LP120XUSB at $399 costs $49 less and has direct drive, an upgradeable AT-VM95E cartridge, 78 RPM support, and better long-term sound quality. If you need automatic operation and Bluetooth together, buy the Sony when it drops below $280. Otherwise the AT-LP120XUSB is the better deck at current prices.

The PS-LX310BT does one thing better than anything else on this site: it gets out of the way. No setup, no adjustment, no ritual. For people who want to play records the way they play Spotify, this is still the correct answer. The price is the only problem. At $249 it was a simple recommendation. At $448 it requires a price alert and a clear reason.

James Calloway has been collecting vinyl for 22 years. He spent six years working at an independent record store in Chicago, setting up and demonstrating turntables for customers at every budget. He has personally owned and tested more than 40 decks from entry-level belt drive to reference direct drive. 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.

7.8 Total Score
Sony PS-LX310BT Bluetooth turntable review 2026

Fully automatic and aptX Bluetooth in one deck. At $249 it was the best first turntable for wireless listeners. At $448 current price it requires a price alert — worth buying immediately below $280.

Sound Quality
7.5
Build Quality
7.5
Value
7.5
Ease of Use
9.5
Cartridge
7.0
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Sony PS-LX310BT Review 2026: The Best Automatic Bluetooth Turntable
Sony PS-LX310BT Review 2026: The Best Automatic Bluetooth Turntable
$488.00
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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