In this article
Welcome to the world of audio & media
Whether you love music, technology, and the craft of sound, or you want a creative technical career in audio, this guide covers what a sound engineer actually does, the skills, the day-to-day, and the honest upsides and downsides.
General description
A sound engineer records, mixes, and produces audio for music, film, broadcast, or live events. In simple terms: they shape and engineer the sound we hear. Think of them as the shapers of sound.
- Record and mix audio
- Engineer sound for music, film, or live
- Shape and balance the sound
- Master tracks and productions
Key skills & qualifications
Hard skills
Soft skills
- Great ear โ hearing what makes sound work
- Technical skill โ mastering the gear and software
- Creativity โ shaping sound artfully
- Attention to detail โ sound is in the detail
- Calm under pressure โ live sound has no retakes
- Collaboration โ working with artists and teams
Education & qualifications
No degree required โ sound engineering is built on technical training, a great ear, and hands-on experience, through courses, studios, and live work. Skill and a portfolio matter most.
Typical responsibilities
- Recording โ capturing audio
- Mixing โ balancing the sound
- Mastering โ the final polish
- Live sound โ engineering shows
- Editing โ shaping audio
- Production โ crafting the sound
Responsibilities by seniority
Junior / Assistant
0โ3 years
- Assists in studio or live
- Learns the gear
- Builds a portfolio
- Developing the ear
- Toward engineering
Sound Engineer
3โ8 years
- Records and mixes independently
- Owns sessions or shows
- Strong technical skill
- Trusted ear
- Specialising
Senior / Lead Engineer
8+ years
- Leads major productions
- Or top live tours
- Recognised skill
- Mentors juniors
- Top of the craft
Where sound engineers work
๐๏ธ Recording studios
Music production.
๐ค Live sound
Concerts and events.
๐ฌ Film / TV
Post-production audio.
๐ป Broadcast
Radio and podcasts.
๐ฎ Games
Game audio.
๐ Home studio / remote
Freelance audio work.
A day in the life
Setting up a session โ preparing the studio, the gear, and the signal flow before recording begins.
Recording an artist, capturing the best possible sound and helping them perform at their best.
Mixing โ balancing every element, shaping the sound until the track comes alive.
Mastering or prepping for a live show, the technical and creative polish that makes audio shine.
Sound captured, mixed, and shaped, audio brought to life. Creative, technical craft. That's the job.
What this job gives you
- Creative technical craft
- Love of sound as a career
- Variety of music, film, live
- Portfolio over pedigree
- In-demand audio skills
Pros & cons
โ Advantages
- Creative technical craft
- Love of sound as a career
- Variety of music, film, live
- Portfolio over pedigree
- In-demand audio skills
- Freelance and remote options
- Deeply satisfying work
โ Disadvantages
- Irregular hours and sessions
- Insecure early on
- Competitive field
- Long hours in production
- Gear investment
- Building a name takes time
Salary potential โ global rating
Rated against all professions globally, where โ โ โ โ โ โ โ โ โ โ = top 1% earners:
Career growth paths
- Senior Engineer โ lead major productions
- Music Producer โ produce records
- Live Sound Engineer โ tour and event sound
- Mastering Engineer โ specialise in mastering
- Post-production โ film and TV audio
- Studio owner โ run your own studio
Sound Engineer vs related roles
Here's how some neighbouring roles compare.
| Role | Core focus | Note | Pay | Entry |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sound Engineer You are here | Records and mixes audio | Audio, mixing, live sound | Baseline | Medium |
| Musician | Creates and performs music | Musicianship | Similar | Accessible |
| Singer | Performs and records vocals | Vocal craft | Lower-similar | Accessible |
| Animator | Brings art to life in motion | Animation | Similar | Medium |
| Art Director | Leads visual direction | Creative leadership | Higher | Medium |
Scroll the table sideways on mobile. Pay comparisons are directional and vary by market and seniority.
Future outlook
Streaming, podcasts, games, and content have created huge demand for audio, keeping skilled sound engineers in steady demand across music, media, and live events.
- Streaming and content boomed audio demand
- Podcasts and games need audio
- Live events endure
- Home studios widen access
- A great ear can't be automated
Fun facts ๐ค
A great mix can transform a song โ the engineer's ear shapes what you hear.
Live sound engineers have no retakes โ it has to be right in the moment.
Film and TV rely on sound engineers for everything you hear on screen.
Home studios mean you can build a career from a bedroom setup.
AI tools assist, but a great ear and creative judgement stay human.
Myths about this role
"It's just pushing faders."
โ It's technical mastery and creative judgement to shape and balance sound.
"Anyone with software can do it."
โ Software is a tool; a great ear and skill take years to develop.
"It's only music."
โ It spans film, TV, broadcast, podcasts, games, and live events.
"You need a degree."
โ No โ skill, a great ear, and a portfolio matter most.
"It doesn't pay."
โ Established engineers and producers earn well.
Is this job right for you?
โ Good fit if you...
- Love sound and music
- Are technical and creative
- Have a great ear
- Are detail-focused
- Want a portfolio-led career
- Don't mind irregular hours
โ Maybe not for you if...
- You want a 9-5 routine
- You dislike technical detail
- You want guaranteed income early
- You dislike long sessions
- You lack a musical ear
- You want a non-creative role
Creative & in-demand
Sound engineering is a creative, technical, in-demand audio career spanning music, film, broadcast, and live events, where a great ear and a strong portfolio open doors over pedigree.
โ Advantages
- Creative technical craft
- In-demand across audio
- Portfolio over pedigree
- Freelance and remote options
- Variety of media
โ Challenges
- Irregular hours and sessions
- Insecure early on
- Competitive field
- Long hours in production
- Gear investment
How to get started
- Learn audio and the gear training, courses, and practice.
- Develop your ear the most important skill.
- Build a portfolio record, mix, and produce work.
- Gain experience studio, live, or post-production.
- Specialise music, live, mastering, or post.
What to know before you start
- It's technical and creative, not just pushing faders
- A great ear matters more than any degree
- It spans music, film, broadcast, games, and live
- A strong portfolio opens doors
- Streaming and content boomed audio demand
- AI assists but doesn't replace the ear
From the field
The same lessons come up again and again from people actually doing the job:
People think I just push faders. A great mix is the difference between a flat recording and a song that moves you โ and that takes technical mastery and a trained ear. The gear is just the tool; the ear is the craft.
Sound engineer ยท 8 years in
Live sound is the ultimate test โ there are no retakes. When the band hits the stage, it has to sound perfect in the moment, every moment. The pressure is real, but getting a live mix right is one of the best feelings there is.
Live sound engineer ยท 11 years in
Podcasts, streaming, games โ the demand for audio exploded. And you can build a career from a home studio now; pedigree doesn't matter, your work does. If you've got the ear and the skill, the opportunities are everywhere.
Freelance engineer & producer ยท 9 years in