What is LUFS (Loudness Units)?
LUFS (Loudness Units relative to Full Scale) is a standardized measurement of perceived loudness that accounts for how human hearing responds to different frequencies.
How It Works
Why It Matters for Your Mix
LUFS has fundamentally changed how professional engineers approach loudness. In the loudness war era, the only winning strategy was to make your track louder than the competition. Now that streaming platforms normalize everything to a target level, dynamics have become the competitive advantage. A track mastered to -14 LUFS with 8 dB of dynamic range will sound punchier, more exciting, and more "alive" on Spotify than a track mastered to -8 LUFS with 3 dB of dynamic range — because Spotify turns them both to roughly the same perceived loudness, but the dynamic track retains its transient impact. Understanding LUFS also helps you make informed genre decisions. A jazz recording might sit comfortably at -18 LUFS with wide dynamics, while an EDM track might target -10 LUFS for its intended dense, in-your-face energy. Neither is wrong — what matters is that you are making a conscious choice based on how the platforms will handle your music, rather than blindly chasing a number.
Common Mistakes
Mastering to a single LUFS target for all platforms
Different platforms have different normalization targets, and the differences matter. A track mastered to -14 LUFS for Spotify may be turned up slightly on Apple Music (-16 LUFS target), potentially revealing noise or artifacts. Master for the dynamics your music needs and check how the result translates across platforms.
Prioritizing LUFS over dynamic range
Chasing a specific LUFS number often leads to over-compression and over-limiting. A track at -11 LUFS that sounds dynamic and punchy is far better than a track at -14 LUFS that was squashed to hit that exact number. Let the genre and the music dictate the loudness; use LUFS as a reference, not a rigid target.
Measuring LUFS only at the loudest section
Integrated LUFS is a whole-track measurement, and a quiet intro or breakdown significantly affects the number. If you measure only during the chorus, your reading will be misleadingly high. Always check the integrated LUFS of the full bounce, and use short-term LUFS to evaluate individual sections.
How We Analyze This in Your Mix
RoastYourMix performs a full integrated LUFS measurement of your uploaded track using K-weighted loudness metering per the ITU-R BS.1770 standard. We report your integrated, short-term, and momentary LUFS readings, compare them to major streaming platform targets, and estimate how much your track will be turned up or down on Spotify, Apple Music, and YouTube.
See LUFS (Loudness Units) in Action
Upload your mix and see how lufs (loudness units) affects your track.
Get Your Mix RoastedFrequently Asked Questions
Spotify normalizes to approximately -14 LUFS integrated. However, do not sacrifice dynamics just to hit -14. If your genre calls for a louder master (-10 to -12 LUFS), Spotify will simply turn it down — which is fine, as long as your track sounds good. The key is to avoid over-limiting to hit a specific number.
Both measure average loudness, but LUFS applies a K-weighting filter that models human hearing perception, making it a more accurate representation of how loud something actually sounds. RMS is a straight mathematical average of signal amplitude with no frequency weighting. LUFS has become the industry standard for loudness measurement.
Technically, the platform normalization targets are the same regardless of genre. But different genres have different typical loudness ranges — classical music might integrate at -20 LUFS, pop at -12 to -14 LUFS, and EDM at -8 to -10 LUFS. These genre norms exist because they serve the music, not because the platforms demand them.
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