Mastering Signal Chain Reference
Platform-specific mastering chain with exact settings per stage — tap to expand parameters and check off each step.
About the Mastering Signal Chain Reference
The Mastering Signal Chain Reference is a free interactive tool for music producers who want accurate answers fast. Whether you're searching for mastering signal chain order, mastering settings by platform, mastering chain reference guide, this tool gives you real-time results without leaving your browser — and explains the reasoning behind every value so you know what to do with it.
Every tool on MusicProductionWiki is built around one principle: answer the question and explain the reasoning. The Mastering Signal Chain Reference not only calculates — it shows you why those values work, what changes when you adjust them, and what professional producers do differently across genres.
This tool is part of the Loudness & Delivery category. It's embedded directly inside the relevant entries in The Producer's Bible — MPW's comprehensive reference library — where it appears in context alongside the theory that explains why each setting works the way it does.
All tools on MusicProductionWiki are free, require no login, and work in any modern browser on desktop or mobile.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the correct mastering signal chain order?
A standard mastering chain: High-pass filter → Linear phase EQ (corrective) → Multiband or wideband compressor → Mid-side EQ (tonal balance) → Stereo widening → Saturation/tape → Limiting → True Peak metering. Always limit last — the limiter is the ceiling of the entire chain.
How loud should I master for Spotify vs a club track?
For Spotify, target -14 LUFS integrated with True Peak at -1 dBTP. Spotify normalizes louder masters down to -14 LUFS, so there is no benefit to mastering louder. For club / DJ use, -9 to -11 LUFS is common — DJs need headroom in their mixers and louder tracks punch harder on large systems.
Should I use multiband or wideband compression for mastering?
Start with wideband compression. Multiband is powerful but easy to misuse — it can create unnatural tonal balance changes when different frequency bands pump at different rates. Use multiband only to solve specific problems: a boomy low end that compresses independently of the mids, or a harsh high end that needs independent control.