Vintage vinyl deserves a phono stage that doesn’t blur the details, and Vertere Acoustics has gone back to the drawing board with one of its most admired performers. The Phono-1LX is a refined evolution of the brand’s well-regarded moving-magnet/moving-coil preamplifier, and the company is promising “razor-sharp” spatial imaging alongside voices it describes as “lifelike.”
What’s new is mostly happening on the inside. Vertere has upgraded the PCB for better long-term reliability, redesigned the internal DC power supply to drop the noise floor, and improved the AC mains power input filtering. None of that sounds glamorous on paper, but for a device whose entire job is to amplify the tiny signal coming off a cartridge, cleaner power and lower noise translate directly into the kind of clarity audiophiles obsess over.
Flexibility remains a strong suit. The Phono-1LX caters to both MM and MC cartridges with an impressively granular set of adjustments:
- 10 gain settings to match a wide range of cartridge outputs
- 15 input impedance settings for fine-tuning resistance loading
- 9 capacitance settings to dial in the response
That depth of adjustment is what separates a serious phono stage from a budget afterthought. It means you can properly partner the unit with almost any cartridge you throw at it, rather than settling for a one-size-fits-all compromise.
Cosmetically, the Phono-1LX leans into understatement. It wears a finely textured metallic finish with a blue-green power LED, and the chassis ditches top fixing screws for a cleaner, seamless look. It’s the sort of restrained industrial design that tends to age gracefully on a hi-fi rack.
The Phono-1LX made its world premiere at the North West Audio Show 2026, where Vertere positioned it as sounding “better than ever.” A review sample has been undergoing testing, so a full verdict on whether the upgrades deliver on those lofty claims is still to come.
Pricing puts it firmly in premium territory at £1650 / $2399 / €1998. That’s not impulse-buy money, but it slots into the bracket where buyers expect meaningful engineering rather than cosmetic tweaks — and on that front, the internal overhaul gives the Phono-1LX a credible story to tell.