Jun 5 Podcast #1256: How Much Do Audio Speakers Cost to Build?
On today’s show, we dive into the cost structure of audio speakers. We start with an article that asks whether ‘audiophile’ speaker brands are milking you for $20,000. We also read your emails and cover the week’s news.
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Today's Show:
News:
- Important update to your DIRECTV account
- SVS Auto EQ Room Correction for R|Evolution Subwoofers
- YouTube TV adds Fox One, Peacock to Primetime Channels store
Other:
- Monoprice Alpha In-Wall Speaker
- There's never been a better time to grab a new Google TV launcher
- HT Guys Amazon Lists
- HT Guys Music Playlist on Apple Music
- HT Guys Music Playlist on Amazon Music
- HT Guys Music Playlist on Spotify
- Ara's Woodworking
Are ‘Audiophile’ Speaker Brands Are Milking You for $20,000
The listeners keep delivering great ideas for show topics. This week Mike LaBorde sent in an article published at headphonesty.com entitled A Former FTC Economist Quit His Job to Prove ‘Audiophile’ Speaker Brands Are Milking You for $20,000.
The author talks about how a former FTC economist quit his job to design and build affordable high-performance speakers. He argued that many premium audiophile brands are significantly overpriced because they use similar OEM drivers from the same factories while charging massive markups for branding, cabinets, and dealer margins.
We’ll break down this article into five points we felt were interesting. The full article is linked and you may want to read it for more details.
- Many premium audiophile speaker brands rely on the same small group of OEM driver manufacturers (like Sinar Baja/SB Acoustics, SEAS (Scandinavian Electro Acoustic Systems), Scan-Speak, etc.). The same factories and engineering talent supply drivers to both high-end and mainstream brands, even when the final speakers carry vastly different logos and price tags.
- "Custom" or "proprietary" drivers are often overstated. Most brands customize only the "soft parts" (cone, surround, voice coil) on top of standard off-the-shelf "hard parts" from OEM suppliers, rather than designing and building drivers entirely from scratch.
- Pricing of speakers — The actual cost of the drivers is a tiny fraction of the retail price. In the Wilson Audio Yvette example, the three drivers cost roughly $530–$580 total, representing only about 2% of the $25,000+ selling price. The vast majority of the cost comes from cabinetry, finish, dealer margins (40-50%), distribution, marketing, and brand prestige, with a typical 5x markup from manufacturing cost to retail.
- Only a few brands truly manufacture their own drivers in-house. Companies like Focal, KEF, Dynaudio, Paradigm, and Bowers & Wilkins are exceptions. Most premium brands outsource driver production due to the high cost and complexity of vertical integration.
- High performance doesn’t require extreme prices. Former FTC economist Dennis Murphy’s Philharmonic Audio proves this by offering well-engineered speakers (like the $850/pair Ceramic Mini using quality SB Acoustics drivers) with minimal overhead, direct sales, and no lavish dealer/showroom costs — challenging the idea that great sound must come with five-figure price tags.
The article essentially argues that much of the ultra-premium speaker market is driven more by branding and distribution economics than by revolutionary driver technology.
What is the Cost Breakdown of Thousand Dollar Speakers?
After going through the previous article we wondered what the actual cost breakdown of Passive bookshelf speakers retailing at $1,000 per pair? ThinkKEF Q series, ELAC Debut Reference, or similar mid to high end consumer hi-fi brands. They balance good performance with accessible pricing.
What follows is our best estimation based on the data we uncovered. If you are in the industry and have better data, please let us know and we will update this analysis. Sources for this analysis include - Audio Science Review, AVS Forum, WhatHifi, headphonesty.com, hubhifi, and a few others.
1. Design & Development (R&D) – Upfront Investment
- Typical cost: $50,000–$250,000+ for a new model line.
- Includes acoustic modeling, driver selection/tuning, crossover design, enclosure simulation, multiple prototypes, listening tests, and anechoic chamber measurements.
- For this price tier, brands often use a mix of off-the-shelf and mildly customized drivers rather than fully bespoke high-end ones.
- Amortization: Spread over production volume and for this exercise we used a production run of 5,000–20,000 pairs. This adds roughly $5–$25 per pair at a reasonable scale.
2. Prototyping & Tooling
- Prototypes: 5–15 iterations at $300–$1,200 each which include custom cabinets, driver samples, hand-assembled crossovers.
- Tooling: CNC molds/jigs for cabinets, baffle cutting, or vinyl wrap tooling: $8,000–$40,000 upfront. Amortized to $2–$10 per pair.
3. Bill of Materials (BOM) – The Biggest Per-Unit Cost
For a typical 2-way passive bookshelf (6.5" woofer + 1" tweeter) at this price point:
- Drivers - $80–$180 - 6.5" coated paper woofer (~$30–$70 ea.), soft dome or aluminum tweeter (~$15–$50 ea.). Brands like SEAS, SB Acoustics, or custom OEM.
- Cabinet - $60-$130, - Braced MDF (18–25mm), vinyl wrap or basic veneer, internal damping, port tube, terminals. Real wood veneer adds premium.
- Crossover - $30-$80 - 2nd/3rd order with air-core inductors, film capacitors, resistors. Higher quality parts (Mundorf-level) push toward the upper end.
- Other (grille, wiring, hardware, terminals) - $20-$50 - Magnetic grilles, internal wiring, binding posts.
Total BOM per pair: $190–$440 at volume production (typically in China or Vietnam for most brands). Premium touches (better drivers, thicker bracing, nicer finishes) push BOM toward the higher end.
4. Manufacturing, Assembly & Overhead
- Labor & Assembly: $25–$60 per pair (cabinet gluing/bracing, driver mounting, crossover soldering, final wiring, testing).
- Quality Control & Testing: Burn-in, frequency sweeps, distortion checks: $10–$25.
- Factory Overhead/Utilities: $35 - $50.
Total Manufacturing per pair: $70 - $135
5. Full Cost Structure to Retail ($1,000/pair)
We will assume a large brand that sells 20,000 units and has already invested in tooling and requires minimal new tooling for each new speaker design.
- Design and R&D Amortized - $5
- Prototype and Tooling - $2
- Bill of Materials - $315 - We split the $190 - $440 down the middle
- Manufacturing - $103 - We split the $40 - $135 down the middle
- Shipping, duties etc to distributor per pair on average - $50
Total to Manufacture $474. The rest of the thousand dollars covers the distribution chain, branding, and profit. And in reality, depending on the efficiency of the factory and ability to leverage design histories from years of experience, the soft costs can be about a third of $110 we came up with, bringing the total cost to about $400.
Key Variables Affecting Cost
- Volume: Higher production = lower per-unit costs.
- Driver Quality: Exotic materials (beryllium tweeters, carbon fiber) can double driver costs.
- Cabinet Finish: Vinyl vs. real walnut veneer = big difference.
- Brand Positioning: Established names (KEF, ELAC) have higher R&D/marketing allocation than direct-to-consumer brands.
For comparison DIY builders can replicate similar performance for $300–$600 per pair in parts using higher quality drivers and crossover components and flat-pack or self-built cabinets, eliminating most of the overhead and markups.
And after building over 30 sets of speakers I can say without doubt that what you build will sound as good as speakers costing ten times the amount. Plus you can use material that works best for you as well as customizing the look to match your decor. Even my latest set built from stock off the shelf components bought from Part Express for about $200 sound simply amazing!


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