Head to head

Focusrite Scarlett Solo 4th Gen vs RODECaster Duo

A side-by-side look at Focusrite Scarlett Solo 4th Gen and RODECaster Duo for podcasters: pricing, features, and where each one wins.

Focusrite Scarlett Solo 4th Gen

The best-selling starter interface just keeps getting better

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RODECaster Duo

Two Revolution preamps, a touchscreen, and a full production studio under your hands

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At a glance

Focusrite Scarlett Solo 4th GenRODECaster Duo
Starting priceSee siteSee site
Free planNoNo
Free trialNoNo
Best forSolo podcasters or vocalists who need one XLR mic input, solid preamp quality, and zero driver headachesSolo or two-person podcast productions who want a self-contained studio that handles mixing, processing, and recording without a computer

Key features

Focusrite Scarlett Solo 4th Gen

  • 1 XLR mic input with 48V phantom power
  • 1 Hi-Z instrument input (front panel)
  • USB-C bus powered
  • 24-bit / 192 kHz converters
  • Switchable Air mode for high-frequency presence boost
  • 2 x 1/4" TRS monitor outputs

RODECaster Duo

  • 2 Neutrik XLR/TRS combo inputs with Revolution preamps (76 dB gain)
  • APHEX Aural Exciter and Big Bottom processing per channel
  • Full-color touchscreen interface
  • Dual USB-C (two independent audio devices simultaneously)
  • Bluetooth connectivity and wireless mic receiver integration
  • MicroSD multitrack recording, 24-bit / 48 kHz

Pros and cons

Focusrite Scarlett Solo 4th Gen

Pros

  • Best-in-class preamp quality at this price point
  • Air mode adds instant presence without EQ plugins
  • USB-C - compatible with modern laptops without dongles
  • Compact, bus-powered - takes zero desk space

Cons

  • Only one XLR input - no co-host capability
  • No MIDI I/O
  • No direct monitoring blend knob (monitor mix is software-controlled)

RODECaster Duo

Pros

  • 76 dB preamp gain handles the most demanding dynamic mics
  • Dual USB-C lets you route differently to streaming and recording apps
  • APHEX processing onboard - no plugins needed
  • Self-contained recording without a computer via microSD

Cons

  • Two inputs only - three or more guests require the RODECaster Pro II
  • 48 kHz max sample rate (no 96 kHz)
  • Higher price than a standard two-input interface for the same input count

The verdict

Choose Focusrite Scarlett Solo 4th Gen if

Solo podcasters or vocalists who need one XLR mic input, solid preamp quality, and zero driver headaches.

The Scarlett Solo remains the interface millions of beginners start with - and for good reason. The preamp is clean, the Air mode adds useful presence on vocal-heavy content, and USB-C bus power means one cable handles everything. The hard…

Read the full Focusrite Scarlett Solo 4th Gen review →

Choose RODECaster Duo if

Solo or two-person podcast productions who want a self-contained studio that handles mixing, processing, and recording without a computer.

The RODECaster Duo sits in a sweet spot that the full RODECaster Pro II might overkill and a basic interface cannot reach. The Revolution preamps are genuinely impressive - 76 dB of gain handles ribbon mics and low-sensitivity dynamics without…

Read the full RODECaster Duo review →

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