The best microphone boom arms for YouTube creators in 2026 are the Rode PSA1+ at £120 for most creators, the Blue Compass at £99 for a premium budget option, and the Elgato Wave Mic Arm LP at £149 for low-profile streamer setups. A proper boom arm eliminates desk clutter, positions your mic consistently, and accommodates heavier broadcast dynamics like the Shure SM7B that require sturdy support. Cheap £20 Amazon arms work but sag under real mic weight and squeak constantly in recordings. For anyone using a proper dynamic microphone, spending £90-150 on a decent arm is non-negotiable.
This list is based on boom arm deployments with broadcast mics across managed creator channels. For broader context, see my Ultimate Creator Equipment Guide 2026.
Quick Comparison: Best Microphone Boom Arms 2026
| Boom Arm | Best For | Price | Max Load |
|---|---|---|---|
| Neewer NB-35 | Budget / light mics | £25 | 1.5 kg |
| Innogear Heavy Duty | Budget-mid creators | £40 | 2 kg |
| Blue Compass | Premium budget | £99 | 1.2 kg |
| Rode PSA1+ | Most creators, broadcast | £120 | 1.2 kg |
| Elgato Wave Mic Arm | Standard profile streamers | £129 | 1.1 kg |
| Elgato Wave Mic Arm LP | Low-profile streamer setup | £149 | 1.1 kg |
| Blue Bluebird | Professional alternative | £179 | 2 kg |
| Yellowtec m!ka On-Air Set | Broadcast studio | £499 | 3 kg |
1. Neewer NB-35 — Best Ultra-Budget Arm
Price: £25
Max load: 1.5 kg
Best for: Budget starter creators with light USB mics
The Neewer NB-35 is the absolute budget option. Aluminium construction, desk clamp, standard mic thread. Works with light USB mics (Blue Yeti, HyperX QuadCast, Rode NT-USB+) that weigh under 1kg.
Limitations: squeaks when adjusted during recordings (springs aren’t dampened), sags with heavier mics like Shure SM7B or MV7+, finish wears quickly. For creators getting started with a cheap USB mic, it’s acceptable. For anything serious, it’s a frustrating purchase you’ll replace within months.
Pros: Genuinely cheap, works for light mics, widely available
Cons: Squeaks in recording, sags with heavy mics, shorter lifespan
2. Innogear Heavy Duty — Best Budget-Mid
Price: £40
Max load: 2 kg
Best for: Budget creators wanting SM7B support
The Innogear Heavy Duty is the £40 sweet spot. Internal spring mechanism (quieter than exposed-spring designs), proper cable management channels, and genuine 2kg capacity that supports SM7B, MV7+, and similar broadcast dynamics.
Not as refined as Rode or Elgato — mechanism feels slightly cheap, clamp can loosen over time. For creators on a tight budget who want proper broadcast mic support, this delivers 70-80% of premium arm experience at 30% of the cost.
Pros: Handles SM7B, internal springs, affordable
Cons: Less refined than Rode/Elgato, finish durability
3. Blue Compass — Best Premium Budget
Price: £99
Max load: 1.2 kg
Best for: Premium look under £100
The Blue Compass (from Blue/Logitech) brings premium design to sub-£100. Smooth, concealed-spring internal mechanism, elegant matte finish, integrated cable channel. Pairs aesthetically with Blue Yeti X, Blue Bluebird, and other Blue-branded mics.
Load capacity limits it — 1.2kg means no SM7B with typical shockmounts (SM7B + proper shockmount = ~1.3kg). Fine for most USB condenser mics and lighter dynamics. For SM7B/MV7+ users, step up to Rode PSA1+.
Pros: Premium aesthetics, silent operation, quality mechanism
Cons: 1.2kg capacity limits mic choice
4. Rode PSA1+ — Best for Most Creators
Price: £120
Max load: 1.2 kg
Best for: Most creators using broadcast dynamics
The Rode PSA1+ is the default recommendation for serious creator audio setups. Dampened internal springs (silent during recording and adjustment), multiple cable management channels, 360° rotation, and clean matte black finish.
This is the arm I specify most often alongside Shure MV7+ and similar broadcast mics. Proper engineering means no squeaks in recordings, no sagging during long sessions, and smooth repositioning. Rode’s build quality reputation extends here — expect 10+ years of use.
Pros: Silent operation, excellent cable management, proven durability
Cons: 1.2kg capacity tight for SM7B with heavy shockmount
5. Elgato Wave Mic Arm — Standard Streamer Profile
Price: £129
Max load: 1.1 kg
Best for: Standard desk streamer setups
The Elgato Wave Mic Arm is Elgato’s premium boom arm for streamer ecosystems. Hidden internal cable channel, magnetic cable management covers, 360° pivot, and design that complements other Elgato products (Key Light Air, Stream Deck MK.2).
Capacity limits it to sub-1.1kg mics — most USB condensers work, SM7B is marginal. For Elgato Wave-series USB mics, this arm integrates perfectly.
Pros: Elgato ecosystem integration, premium cable management
Cons: Lower capacity than Rode PSA1+ at higher price
6. Elgato Wave Mic Arm LP — Low Profile Streamer
Price: £149
Max load: 1.1 kg
Best for: Stream camera angles, minimal visual intrusion
The Elgato Wave Mic Arm LP solves the “mic arm visible on stream” problem. Instead of rising vertically from the desk, it extends horizontally across the desktop, positioning the mic low and out of camera frame. Brilliant for streamers who face their camera and don’t want the arm bisecting the shot.
Genuinely unique form factor — no direct competitor at this price. The low-profile approach changes the mic-to-mouth distance dynamics and requires slightly more careful positioning.
Pros: Out of camera frame, innovative horizontal design, Elgato integration
Cons: Premium price, requires workflow adjustment for mic position
7. Blue Bluebird — Premium Professional
Price: £179
Max load: 2 kg
Best for: Heavy mic + shockmount setups
The Blue Bluebird is the professional-tier Blue arm. 2kg capacity handles SM7B + heavy shockmount + pop filter combinations. Built-in LED lighting, integrated cable channels, premium matte black finish.
For creators building premium home studios where aesthetic matters and mic weight requires full capacity, the Bluebird justifies its premium. For typical creator use, Rode PSA1+ delivers similar function at lower cost.
Pros: 2kg capacity, premium build, integrated LED
Cons: Premium price, LED feature often unused
8. Yellowtec m!ka On-Air Set — Broadcast Studio
Price: £499
Max load: 3 kg
Best for: Professional broadcast studios
The Yellowtec m!ka On-Air Set is the professional broadcast boom arm. Used in BBC studios, professional radio stations, and commercial production facilities globally. Modular design allows precise positioning, internal gas spring system (completely silent), and aircraft-grade aluminium construction.
For YouTube creators, this is firmly overkill. For creators scaling into broadcast production or professional podcast studios, it’s the industry standard. Lasts 20+ years of daily professional use.
Pros: Industry-standard professional build, modular positioning, durability
Cons: Extremely expensive, overkill for creators
Honourable Mentions
- Heil PL-2T (£89) — US-brand boom arm popular with podcasters. Basic but solid.
- Rode PSA1 (£95) — original version of PSA1+, still excellent, missing updated cable management.
- SmallRig 4168 Magic Arm (£35) — budget alternative worth consideration.
- K&M 23860 (£139) — German-made engineering, excellent but expensive for feature set.
- Mountain Everest Arm (£79) — Mountain’s streaming-focused arm with RGB.
Why Boom Arms Matter (Not Just Cable Cleanliness)
Boom arms solve multiple workflow problems simultaneously:
Consistent mic positioning
Professional voice recording requires consistent mic-to-mouth distance. Desk stands shift when you move. Boom arms stay exactly where you set them, ensuring recording sessions sound consistent across takes, days, months.
Reduced vibration transmission
Desk-mounted mics pick up keyboard clicks, typing, mouse movement through desk vibration. Boom arms (with proper shockmounts) isolate mic from these vibrations. Critical for broadcast-quality audio in typical desk environments.
Better ergonomics
Position mic exactly where comfortable without desk space competition. Swivel out of the way when not in use. Bring in close for recording without leaning toward the desk.
Desk space liberation
Desk mount frees up entire desk surface for keyboard, monitors, tablet. Critical for multi-monitor gaming setups or complex production workflows.
Cable management
Professional boom arms have internal or semi-hidden cable channels. No mess of XLR/USB cables running across the desk. Cleaner camera view for streamers.
Desk Clamp vs Bolt-Through Mounting
Boom arms mount to desks via two methods:
Desk clamp (standard)
- Clamps to desk edge (typically 5-6cm max thickness)
- Easy install/removal, no desk modification
- Works on most desks including renters
- Can slip on uneven edges or soft desk surfaces
Bolt-through mounting
- Requires drilling hole in desk
- Permanent, most stable installation
- Best for thick solid-wood desks
- Typically requires buying adapter (£15-25 separately)
For most creators, desk clamp is appropriate. Drilling is only worth it for permanent studio installations on owned furniture.
Matching Boom Arm to Your Microphone
Light USB condensers (Blue Yeti, HyperX QuadCast, Rode NT-USB+)
Typical weight: 400-700g. Any arm works including Neewer NB-35 or Innogear Heavy Duty. Match aesthetics to mic — Blue Compass with Blue mics, Elgato Wave Arm with Elgato mics.
USB dynamic mics (Shure MV7+, Rode PodMic USB)
Typical weight: 650g + shockmount = 750-850g. Rode PSA1+ or better recommended. Avoid cheapest Neewer arms — weight sag becomes apparent.
XLR dynamic mics (Shure SM7B, Electro-Voice RE20)
Typical weight: SM7B 766g + shockmount 400-500g = 1.1-1.3kg total. Need genuinely capable arm. Rode PSA1+ at limit; Blue Bluebird or Innogear Heavy Duty preferred.
XLR condensers (Rode NT1, Neumann TLM 102)
Typical weight: 400-600g mic + 300g shockmount. Rode PSA1+ or better for professional feel.
Boom Arm Selection Guide by Use Case
Budget starter (under £50)
Buy: Innogear Heavy Duty (£40) if you have broadcast dynamic, Neewer NB-35 (£25) for USB condenser.
Most creators with broadcast mic (£100-150)
Buy: Rode PSA1+ (£120). The default recommendation for proper audio setups.
Elgato ecosystem streamer (£130-150)
Buy: Elgato Wave Mic Arm LP (£149) for low-profile or standard Wave Arm (£129) if LP form factor doesn’t suit.
SM7B user requiring maximum capacity (£150-200)
Buy: Blue Bluebird (£179) or Innogear Heavy Duty (£40) budget option. Both handle 2kg+ reliably.
Professional broadcast studio (£400+)
Buy: Yellowtec m!ka On-Air Set (£499). Professional tier only.
Minimalist / low-profile camera view
Buy: Elgato Wave Mic Arm LP (£149). Horizontal arm stays out of frame.
Essential Boom Arm Accessories
- Shockmount: Essential — isolates mic from arm vibrations. Usually sold separately (£30-80). Shure SM7B includes its shockmount; MV7+ doesn’t.
- Pop filter: External pop filter improves plosive (“P” and “B” sounds) handling. Foam filters attach to mic; mesh filters clip to boom arm (£15-30).
- Cable management sleeves: Tidy XLR + power cables together (£8-15).
- Desk clamp extension: For thicker desks exceeding clamp’s 5-6cm limit (£10-20).
- Bolt-through mounting hardware: For permanent installation (£15-25).
Common Boom Arm Mistakes
Mistake 1: Buying cheap arm for broadcast mic
Neewer £25 arms technically support SM7B weight but sag visibly during long sessions, squeak during repositioning, and develop wobble within months. False economy.
Mistake 2: Wrong clamp size for desk
Measure desk thickness before buying. Most arms clamp to 2.5-6cm thick edges. IKEA Bekant at 5cm is usually fine; thick solid-wood desks at 8cm+ need extension or bolt-through.
Mistake 3: No shockmount
Attaching mic directly to arm transmits all vibration. Always use appropriate shockmount (most broadcast mics have specific shockmounts designed for them).
Mistake 4: Ignoring cable management
Loose cables swinging across arm pick up vibration and look unprofessional on camera. Use internal channels or external cable management sleeves.
Mistake 5: Mounting to flimsy desk
MDF and flat-pack desks flex under boom arm torque. Results in visible arm-swaying during movement. Solid wood or thick MDF (25mm+) recommended.
Frequently Asked Questions
Will a cheap boom arm really make noise in recordings?
Yes, noticeably. Uninsulated springs squeak when arm shifts even slightly. Viewers hear it as random “creaking” during otherwise-silent moments. Proper boom arms have internal dampened mechanisms that eliminate this entirely. The difference is audible and substantial.
Does boom arm capacity matter if I have a light mic?
Only somewhat. Over-specified arm (2kg capacity with 700g mic) is fine — just unused capacity. Under-specified arm (1kg capacity with 1.2kg load) sags progressively. For future-proofing, choose arm that handles your maximum likely mic upgrade.
Can I use a boom arm with a clip-on lavalier?
Technically yes, but pointless — lavaliers are designed for clothing attachment. For stationary desk recording with lavalier, a small desk stand with shockmount works better than boom arm.
How much desk space does a boom arm need?
Clamp footprint is typically 5 × 10cm. Arm extends up to 70-90cm from mounting point. The clamped desk edge is the real space commitment — you lose ~8cm of desk edge for clamp plus 5cm clearance behind.
Does the arm need to be directly in front of me?
No. Best practice: mount arm to desk edge 30-60cm to the side of your keyboard position. Swing arm in front of face when recording, swing to the side when not. Keeps desk clear for work.
Can I use one boom arm for multiple mics?
Sequentially yes (swap mics in/out). Simultaneously no (one mic per arm). Most creators use one arm for one primary mic. Multi-mic podcast setups require multiple arms.
How long do boom arms last?
Quality arms last 10-20 years. Cheap arms show wear within 1-2 years (springs lose tension, finish degrades, hinges loosen). For “buy once, cry once” logic: spend £100-150 on decent arm and never replace.
Will boom arm work with non-standard mic threads?
Most arms use 5/8-inch thread (industry standard). Most mics use 5/8-inch female thread. Adapter to 3/8-inch thread costs £5. Universal compatibility is high across boom arms and mics.
What to Do Next
- Read the full Creator Equipment Guide 2026 for broader context
- Check my Shure MV7+ review — the most common mic paired with boom arms
- Or Shure SM7B vs MV7+ if considering broadcast tier
- See best audio interfaces for XLR setup context
- Apply the 30/25/25/20 budget rule
- Check niche guides for gaming, course creators, or finance channels
- Avoid common mistakes in creator equipment mistakes
- For personalised audio setup advice, book a free discovery call
Boom arms are the most underappreciated creator audio accessory. Every creator with a proper dynamic mic needs one — spend £90-150 for silent operation and proper capacity. The Rode PSA1+ is my default recommendation for 80% of creators. Step up to Blue Bluebird for SM7B with heavy shockmount, or Elgato Wave Mic Arm LP for low-profile streaming setups. Don’t buy £20 Amazon arms for serious audio — the squeaks and sag cost you more in retakes than the arm upgrade costs.
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