About Altravox
Honest home-audio advice, tested by ear
Altravox is an independent publication about headphones, speakers, hi-fi, and home theater. We help people spend their money well and get the best sound out of what they own.
Why we started Altravox
Most audio coverage falls into one of two traps. It is either a wall of measurements and marketing that tells you nothing about how a product actually sounds, or it is a thin excuse to push whatever brand paid the most. We wanted a third option: clear, honest writing for people who love music and just want gear that sounds great without being fleeced.
Altravox started in 2026 as a small group of listeners who kept trading notes on what to buy and what to skip. Those notes turned into reviews, and the reviews turned into this. Today we publish across four areas — headphones and earbuds, speakers and hi-fi, home theater, and buying guides — all built on the same belief: your ears, in your room, are the only benchmark that matters.
How we test
Every review is written or edited by someone who has actually lived with the gear. We listen for weeks across real music, real rooms and real budgets — not a single track in a showroom. We favour depth over volume, we update reviews when firmware or prices change, and we are upfront about what we didn't get to hear. When we recommend something, it is because we'd tell a friend to buy it — not because someone paid us to.
You can read more about how we work in our editorial policy.
What we value
The principles behind every article
Tested by ear
We live with every product for weeks and judge it the way you will — by listening. If a headphone measures well but no longer makes you want to finish the album, we say so.
Reader-first, always
Our verdicts are independent. We are never paid to praise a product, we buy or borrow review units on our own terms, and we keep advertising clearly separate from editorial.
No hype, ever
Audio is full of marketing and magic cables. We stick to what we can actually hear, and we're honest about when an upgrade isn't worth it.
Plain and honest
No jargon walls, no padding, and no pretending the trade-offs don't exist. We explain how gear sounds the way we'd explain it to a friend.
The team
Who writes Altravox
Marcus has reviewed hundreds of headphones and in-ear monitors the only way that counts — by living with them for weeks and measuring what he hears. A former live-sound engineer, he cares less about spec sheets than about whether a pair still makes you want to finish the album. He is quietly obsessed with fit, tuning and the unglamorous business of getting good sound for less money.
Elena has been building and rebuilding stereo systems since she saved up for her first turntable at seventeen. She writes about speakers, amplifiers and the small tweaks — placement, cabling, room treatment — that matter more than most upgrades. Her rule: the best system is the one that disappears and leaves only the music.
Theo has calibrated home theaters in apartments and dedicated rooms alike, and has run enough cable to wire a small cinema. He explains receivers, soundbars and surround formats plainly, with the trade-offs left in, because most people just want great sound without a weekend of frustration. He reviews every setup in a normal living room, not a lab.