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Audio Compressor Settings Explained

Audio compressor settings control dynamic range: how strongly loud moments are reduced and how naturally the processor reacts. These controls shape loudness movement, but they are not the same as bitrate or file-size compression.

Need smaller MB instead?Compressor settings shape how audio sounds. If you need a smaller file instead, use the Audio Compressor to adjust bitrate, format, and target size.
Compress File Size

Quick Settings Table

A compressor is easier to learn when each control has one job. Start with threshold and ratio, then adjust attack and release only after you can hear what the compressor is doing. Knee and makeup gain refine the result, while input and output gain keep the signal at a workable level before and after processing.

ParameterWhat it controlsTypical beginner rangeWhen to adjust
ThresholdThe level where compression begins-24 to -12 dB for speechLower it when peaks are not being controlled; raise it when everything sounds squeezed
RatioHow strongly signal above threshold is reduced2:1 to 4:1Increase for firmer voice control; decrease for a more natural sound
AttackHow fast compression starts after the signal crosses threshold5 to 30 msFaster catches sharp peaks; slower keeps more transient detail
ReleaseHow fast compression stops after the signal falls back50 to 200 msAdjust when the sound pumps, breathes, or stays flattened
KneeHow gradually compression begins around the thresholdSoft or medium for beginnersUse soft knee for smoother voice; hard knee for more obvious control
Makeup GainLevel added after compressionAs needed, often 1 to 6 dBRaise only enough to match loudness after gain reduction
Input GainLevel entering the compressorEnough to hit threshold on peaksUse when the compressor is barely reacting or reacting constantly
Output GainFinal level leaving the compressorMatch bypassed loudnessUse to prevent clipping or keep plugin chains balanced

Threshold

Threshold answers the question: how loud must the signal get before compression starts? If a voice peaks around -12 dB and the threshold is set to -18 dB, the louder words cross the line and get reduced. If the threshold is set too high, the compressor may barely move. If it is too low, the whole recording can sound held down.

For podcast speech, lower the threshold until the gain reduction meter moves mainly on louder words, not during every syllable. Background music often needs a higher threshold or gentler compression because constant gain reduction can make the bed feel dull. The dedicated audio compressor threshold guide goes deeper into this starting point.

Ratio

Ratio decides how much the compressor pushes down the part above threshold. A 2:1 ratio is gentle: 6 dB over the threshold becomes about 3 dB over it. A 4:1 ratio is stronger and is common for voice control. Around 10:1 the result starts to feel limiter-like, especially when paired with a low threshold and fast timing.

Higher ratio is not automatically better. Too much ratio can make speech dense, small, or obviously processed. For a focused explanation with examples, use the audio compressor ratio guide.

Attack and Release

Attack and release decide how quickly the compressor reacts. Fast attack grabs peaks quickly, which can help harsh consonants or sudden loud words, but it can also remove life from drums, guitar, or expressive speech. Slower attack lets the first moment of a sound pass through before compression starts, preserving punch and clarity.

Release controls recovery. Too fast can cause audible pumping because the level rises and falls between words or beats. Too slow can leave the compressor clamped down, making the next phrase feel flat. The attack and release guide explains how to tune timing by ear.

Knee and Makeup Gain

Knee controls how abruptly compression begins near the threshold. A hard knee applies the ratio more suddenly and can sound precise or aggressive. A soft knee eases into compression around the threshold, which is usually more forgiving on speech, podcast voices, and acoustic sources.

Makeup gain compensates for the level lost when peaks are reduced. It does not make the file smaller, and it should not be used just to make everything loud. Add enough gain to compare the processed signal fairly with the unprocessed one. If makeup gain pushes the output into clipping, reduce output gain or use a limiter later in the chain.

Starter Settings for Common Uses

The numbers below are starting points, not rules. Different microphones, rooms, voices, and recordings need different thresholds because the signal level coming into the compressor changes. Set threshold by watching gain reduction, then use these ranges to choose the general behavior.

Use caseStarter settingsListen for
Podcast voiceRatio 3:1, attack 10-20 ms, release 80-150 ms, soft kneeEven phrases without obvious pumping
Streaming microphoneRatio 3:1 to 4:1, attack 5-15 ms, release 80-120 msSudden laughs controlled without sounding pinned
Voice-overRatio 2:1 to 3:1, attack 10-25 ms, release 100-200 msNatural delivery and stable narration
Acoustic guitarRatio 2:1, attack 20-40 ms, release 100-250 msPreserved pick detail and less spiky strumming
Background musicRatio 1.5:1 to 2:1, slower attack, medium releaseGentle leveling without obvious movement
General speech recordingRatio 2:1 to 4:1, threshold for 3-6 dB reduction on peaksClarity, not loudness for its own sake

Settings That Affect File Size Instead

If your goal is smaller MB, compressor plugin controls are the wrong starting point. File size is mainly controlled by bitrate, format, duration, sample rate, and channels. A 30 minute WAV can remain huge even after perfect voice compression. A 30 minute MP3 can become smaller when exported at a lower bitrate or as mono speech.

Use the Audio Bitrate Calculator to estimate a bitrate from duration and target size, or the Audio File Size Calculator to compare settings before export. Then use the browser Audio Compressor when you need the actual smaller file.

  • Lower bitrate reduces data per second.
  • More efficient formats can reduce size at similar perceived quality.
  • Mono can save space for centered speech.
  • Lower sample rate can help speech but should be tested carefully for music.

FAQ

What are the best audio compressor settings for voice?

Start around 2:1 to 4:1 ratio, medium-fast attack, medium release, soft knee, and threshold set for about 3-6 dB gain reduction on louder phrases. Then adjust by listening.

What threshold should I use for speech?

There is no fixed number because input level varies. Play the loudest section, lower threshold until peaks trigger gain reduction, and use 3-6 dB reduction as a practical starting range.

Is a higher ratio always better?

No. Higher ratios control peaks more firmly, but they can make speech or music sound small, dense, or unnatural. Use only as much ratio as the source needs.

Why does my compressed audio sound unnatural?

Common causes are a threshold that is too low, ratio too high, attack too fast, release too fast, or too much makeup gain. Back off one setting at a time and compare at similar loudness.

Does makeup gain increase file size?

Makeup gain changes loudness, not the encoding bitrate. It does not directly increase file size, although clipping or later processing can affect the final export quality.

Which settings reduce audio file size?

Export settings reduce file size: bitrate, format, sample rate, channels, and target MB. Threshold, ratio, attack, and release shape dynamics instead.

What is the difference between compressor settings and export settings?

Compressor settings change how the audio sounds before export. Export settings decide how the finished audio is encoded and how large the file will be.