Victrola Review: 5 Best Products for Every Kind of Music Lover

Victrola review – Third Man Records turntable and Tempo speakers in yellow and black on wooden shelf

Vinyl never really went away – and this Victrola review proves it, covering everything from a $149 bedroom player to a $799 Sonos turntable. Victrola has been making record players since 1906, and what’s remarkable is how well that history holds up in 2026: the lineup covers everything from a $149 plug-and-play bedroom player to a $799 Wi-Fi turntable that streams directly into your Sonos system without a single extra cable.

Right now there’s a sitewide 10% discount with code SPRING10 – which makes this a particularly good time to pick one up if you’ve been sitting on the idea.

Based on our research and verified buyer feedback, here’s which Victrola is actually right for you.

What Is Victrola?

Victrola started in 1906 as the Victor Talking Machine Company – the brand that put a record player in American living rooms for the first time. Today it’s a Denver-based audio company that makes turntables, all-in-one music centers, Bluetooth speakers, and accessories for anyone from first-time vinyl buyers to dedicated audiophiles.

What sets Victrola apart from cheaper alternatives is the range. Most budget turntable brands have one or two models; Victrola has an entire ecosystem – multiple turntable tiers, a matching speaker line, and even a curated vinyl store. The result is that whether you’re spending $149 or $799, everything is designed to work together.

5 Victrola Products Worth Your Money in 2026

1. Eastwood II – Best Entry-Level Record Player

Victrola Eastwood II record player on wooden cabinet with vinyl records underneath

The Eastwood II is what most people are actually looking for when they search for a record player: something that sounds good, looks good, and doesn’t require a manual the size of a novel. It plays all three speeds (33⅓, 45, and 78 RPM), connects wirelessly to any Bluetooth speaker, and has a built-in speaker for when you just want to put on a record without setting up anything else.

The walnut and oak finishes give it a warm, furniture-quality look that doesn’t scream ‘cheap gadget.’ Belt-drive mechanism reduces motor noise during playback. Setup takes under five minutes – plug in, pair via Bluetooth if you want, drop the needle. That’s it.

Based on buyer feedback, the built-in speaker is adequate for a bedroom but limited for larger rooms. Most people pair it with a Bluetooth speaker within a few weeks of buying. The Tempo Bookshelf Speakers (covered below) are the natural companion – but any Bluetooth speaker works.

A good option for: first-time buyers, college students, anyone who wants to start a vinyl collection without overthinking it. Not the right fit if you already have a serious audio setup – step up to the Wave or Stream Onyx instead.

Price: $149.99 | Shop the Eastwood II at victrola.com

2. Century Signature+ 6-in-1 Wood Record Player – Best All-in-One

Victrola Century Signature+ 6-in-1 wood record player on shelf with vinyl collection

The Century Signature+ is the right pick if you want one device that handles everything. Six functions in one cabinet: turntable, CD player, cassette player, Bluetooth receiver, FM radio, and RCA input. It has a built-in stereo speaker system, so it’s genuinely self-contained – no external speakers required, no pairing setup.

The 6-in-1 format sounds gimmicky until you realize how many households still have CDs, cassettes, and vinyl in the same collection. For anyone with music spread across formats, this is legitimately useful – you’re not hunting for a separate CD player or a cassette deck. Everything runs through one piece of furniture.

Solid walnut cabinet, belt-drive turntable, 3-speed capability. At $249.99 it’s a lot of functionality for the price. The audio quality from the built-in speakers is noticeably better than the Eastwood II – adequate for most rooms without an external system.

One caveat worth knowing: the CD and cassette components are practical, not audiophile-grade. If critical listening quality across all formats matters, a dedicated setup will outperform it. But for everyday use and the convenience of having everything in one place, it’s hard to beat.

Price: $249.99 | View the full specs at victrola.com

3. Wave Bluetooth Turntable with Auracast – Best Mid-Range Pick

Victrola Wave Bluetooth turntable with Auracast in black Third Man Records edition

The Wave is where Victrola’s lineup gets genuinely interesting from an audio standpoint. It comes fitted with an Audio-Technica AT-VM95E cartridge – the same cartridge audiophiles upgrade to on entry-level decks from other brands. The low-resonance MDF plinth, precision aluminum platter, and anti-vibration silicone slipmat are all thoughtful hardware choices that reduce playback noise and improve detail.

What makes the Wave different from cheaper Bluetooth turntables is Auracast – the new Bluetooth broadcast standard that lets you stream to multiple compatible speakers simultaneously. Instead of pairing to one speaker, you broadcast, and any Auracast device in range picks it up. It also supports aptX Adaptive and aptX HD for hi-res wireless audio on compatible devices, which is a meaningful step up from standard Bluetooth.

Esquire gave it a Gadget Award in 2025, calling it a ‘dream come true for vinyl fans who aren’t afraid to step off their A/V high horse.’ The Wave pairs visually and functionally with the Tempo Bookshelf Speakers – sold separately, but the two together are the system most people actually want.

The Wave comes in white, black, matte green, matte blue, and walnut. The removable headshell allows cartridge upgrades over time.

Price: $499.99 | Check current pricing at victrola.com

4. Stream Onyx – Best for Sonos Households

Victrola Stream Onyx turntable in matte green on wooden shelf – works with Sonos

The Stream Onyx is for one specific type of buyer: someone who already has a Sonos system and wants vinyl to feel like a first-class citizen in it. With built-in Wi-Fi (802.11a/b/g/n/ac) and native Sonos integration, the Stream Onyx streams audio wirelessly to any Sonos speaker on your network – no extra hardware, no workarounds, no phono preamp sitting between the turntable and your receiver.

It streams lossless FLAC at up to 24-bit/48-kHz wirelessly, which preserves more of the vinyl signal than Bluetooth does. Also supports Roon Ready Relay and UPnP for non-Sonos wireless setups. The illuminated control knob on the turntable itself lets you switch playback rooms and adjust volume without touching a phone.

Hardware spec is strong: Audio-Technica AT-VM95E cartridge, aluminum tonearm with removable headshell, adjustable counterweight, die-cast aluminum platter, MDF plinth. The full specification sheet is available in the downloads section on Victrola’s product page.

At $799.99, this is a serious purchase. But if you’re in a Sonos household and have been frustrated by the limitations of Bluetooth turntables, this solves the problem completely. The Victrola Stream app handles all the configuration in a few minutes.

Price: $799.99 | Explore the Stream Onyx at victrola.com

5. Tempo Bluetooth Bookshelf Speakers – Best Companion for Your Turntable

Victrola Tempo bookshelf speakers in Third Man Records yellow and black colorway

Most turntables need external speakers to sound their best – and the Tempo is Victrola’s answer to the obvious follow-up question. At 80W RMS, they’re genuinely powerful for bookshelf speakers, with a balanced soundstage that handles the full frequency range of vinyl without thinning out the bass or compressing the highs.

What makes the Tempo more than just a matching accessory is the input flexibility: Bluetooth, Auracast, RCA, 3.5mm AUX, Optical, and USB-C all in one pair of speakers. That means they work with the turntable, the TV, a laptop, a phone, and a games console simultaneously – one pair of speakers for the whole room. The subwoofer output with integrated bass filter lets you add a sub later without needing a separate receiver.

The Auracast support is the key feature for Victrola users specifically. Pair them with a Wave turntable and you get native Auracast broadcast – the turntable sends, the Tempo receives, and you can add more Auracast speakers anywhere in the room. The color palette matches across the whole Victrola lineup.

A limited edition Third Man Records colourway (yellow/black) is also available – worth looking at if aesthetics matter as much as performance.

Price: $249.99 | Find the right color at victrola.com

Pros and Cons

Pros

  • Lineup covers every budget from $149 to $799 – genuine options at every price point
  • Native Sonos integration on Stream models – no workarounds or extra hardware
  • Auracast support on Wave and Tempo is ahead of most competitors in this price range
  • Audio-Technica AT-VM95E cartridge on Wave and Stream is a genuinely good spec, not a budget compromise
  • Matching design ecosystem – turntable and speaker line are designed to work and look together
  • Free 2-day shipping and 100% money-back guarantee sitewide

Cons

  • Stream Onyx at $799.99 is a significant investment – only makes sense if you’re already in a Sonos household
  • All-in-one players like the Century are convenient but not audiophile-grade across every format
  • Tempo Speakers are sold separately from the turntables – the full setup costs more than the listed turntable price

Who Is Victrola Best For?

The short version of this Victrola review: it works for almost anyone getting into vinyl, but the right model depends heavily on what you’re starting with and where you want to end up.

The Eastwood II is for first-timers who want to spend under $200, get something that looks good, and figure out the rest later. The Century Signature+ is for households with a mixed media collection – vinyl, CDs, and cassettes – who want everything in one place. The Wave is for someone who wants a proper turntable with good components and modern wireless connectivity without crossing $500.

The Stream Onyx is specifically for Sonos users – if you don’t have Sonos, the Wave does more for less. And the Tempo Speakers are the answer to the question every new Victrola owner asks within a few weeks: ‘what speakers should I get to go with this?’

Victrola is not the right fit if you’re a serious audiophile looking for a sub-$500 deck to pair with a high-end phono stage and dedicated amplifier – in that case, Pro-Ject or Rega offer more upgrade path. But for everyone else, the Victrola lineup is hard to beat on value, design, and ease of use.

Final Verdict

Victrola has figured out something most audio brands haven’t: vinyl buyers aren’t all the same. Some want something simple and pretty. Some want to play their old cassettes too. Some want to press a button and have their record play through every speaker in the house.

The Eastwood II is a solid entry point. The Century Signature+ is the right call for mixed-format households. The Wave is the sweet spot – good hardware, modern connectivity, genuinely good sound. The Stream Onyx is purpose-built for Sonos users and does that job better than anything else at this price. And the Tempo Speakers are the pair we’d recommend to anyone asking what to put next to their turntable.

Our Victrola review pick: the Wave at $449.99 paired with Tempo Speakers is the setup most people will be happiest with long-term. Use code SPRING10 for 10% off sitewide.

Browse the full Victrola lineup at victrola.com

FAQ

Is Victrola a good brand for vinyl?

Yes – Victrola is one of the most established turntable brands in the US, with 120 years of history. Their mid-range and premium models (Wave, Stream Onyx) use quality components like Audio-Technica cartridges and aluminum tonearms. Entry-level models are better value than most comparably priced competitors.

Do Victrola turntables need external speakers?

Entry-level models like the Eastwood II and Century Signature+ have built-in speakers. The Wave and Stream Onyx are turntables only – they output via Bluetooth, Auracast, or RCA, so you’ll need a speaker system. Victrola’s own Tempo Speakers are designed specifically to pair with both.

Does Victrola work with Sonos?

The Stream Onyx and Stream Carbon models have native Wi-Fi Sonos integration built in. Other models can connect to Sonos indirectly via the RCA output into a Sonos Amp, but only the Stream series offers true wireless Sonos streaming without extra hardware.

What’s the difference between the Wave and the Stream Onyx?

The Wave is a Bluetooth and Auracast turntable – it connects wirelessly to Bluetooth and Auracast speakers. The Stream Onyx adds Wi-Fi and native Sonos (and Roon) integration, letting you stream vinyl to any room on your network. If you don’t have Sonos, the Wave is better value at $449.99 vs $799.99.

Is there a discount code for Victrola?

At the time of writing, code SPRING10 gives 10% off sitewide at victrola.com. Some exclusions apply – check the site for current offers before 

The Gadget Observer
The Gadget Observer

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