Head to head

Behringer Xenyx Q802USB vs Universal Audio Volt 1

A side-by-side look at Behringer Xenyx Q802USB and Universal Audio Volt 1 for podcasters: pricing, features, and where each one wins.

Behringer Xenyx Q802USB

An 8-channel mixer with built-in USB audio - more than an interface

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Universal Audio Volt 1

One channel of UA preamp character for solo creators

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At a glance

Behringer Xenyx Q802USBUniversal Audio Volt 1
Starting priceSee siteSee site
Free planNoNo
Free trialNoNo
Best forPodcasters who want physical faders, onboard EQ and compression, and the ability to mix multiple sources before sending to a computerSolo podcasters or vocalists who want UA preamp coloring and iOS compatibility in the smallest possible form factor

Key features

Behringer Xenyx Q802USB

  • 2 XLR mic inputs with XENYX preamps and optional 48V phantom power
  • 8-input, 2-bus analog architecture
  • One-knob compressor per mono channel
  • British-style 3-band EQ on mono channels
  • USB 2.0 stereo audio interface (summed mix to USB)
  • Main mix, 2-track, and headphone outputs

Universal Audio Volt 1

  • 24-bit / 192 kHz converters
  • Vintage mic preamp mode (610 tube circuit-inspired)
  • USB 2.0 class-compliant, iOS compatible
  • 1 XLR/TRS/Hi-Z combo input with 48V phantom power
  • 1-in / 2-out signal path
  • Bus powered, compact desktop form factor

Pros and cons

Behringer Xenyx Q802USB

Pros

  • Physical faders and knobs for hands-on mixing control
  • Built-in compressors reduce the need for software dynamics plugins
  • British EQ tonality adds character for voice applications
  • Can integrate a phone, tablet, and multiple mics simultaneously

Cons

  • USB sends only a stereo sum - no multitrack recording
  • Preamp quality is adequate, not outstanding
  • Analog mixer form factor takes more desk space than a compact interface

Universal Audio Volt 1

Pros

  • Vintage mode analog character in a single-input box
  • Class-compliant iOS and Mac/Windows support
  • Extremely compact and bus-powered
  • Good headphone output for monitoring

Cons

  • Single input only - no co-host capability
  • USB 2.0, not USB-C
  • No MIDI I/O

The verdict

Choose Behringer Xenyx Q802USB if

Podcasters who want physical faders, onboard EQ and compression, and the ability to mix multiple sources before sending to a computer.

The Q802USB sits in a different category from a pure audio interface - it's an analog mixer that adds USB connectivity. That means you get real faders, per-channel EQ knobs, and hardware compressors you can adjust while recording. For someone…

Read the full Behringer Xenyx Q802USB review →

Choose Universal Audio Volt 1 if

Solo podcasters or vocalists who want UA preamp coloring and iOS compatibility in the smallest possible form factor.

If you're recording alone - one voice, one microphone - the Volt 1 covers the job with a preamp pedigree that most interfaces at this size can't match. The Vintage mode is the same 610-inspired circuit as the Volt 2.…

Read the full Universal Audio Volt 1 review →

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