Definition
LUFS is an international standard (ITU-R BS.1770) for measuring audio loudness. Unlike standard peak meters that measure the highest voltage of a signal, LUFS is designed to mimic human hearing by measuring the average energy of a track over time. It provides a consistent “ruler” for loudness across different genres and listening environments.
The Normalization Factor
Most major streaming platforms use Loudness Normalization to ensure a consistent user experience. If your track is delivered at -8 LUFS, the platform will turn it down by 6 decibels to reach its target (typically -14 LUFS).
Because the platform simply adjusts the gain, your “loud” master will not be louder than others on the playlist. However, because you likely used a brickwall limiter to achieve that -8 LUFS, your track will often sound less dynamic and have less “impact” than a mix that was optimized closer to the platform’s target.
Technical Fixes
- Integrated vs. Short-Term: Focus on Integrated LUFS for overall platform compliance, but monitor Short-Term LUFS to ensure your chorus is roughly 1–2 dB louder than your verses for musical impact.
- Loudness Range (LRA): Aim for an LRA between 4 and 8 LUFS. A very low LRA indicates an over-compressed mix that may sound fatiguing to the listener.
- Check the Gain Staging: If you cannot reach -14 LUFS without your limiter working harder than 3dB of gain reduction, re-examine the compression on your individual instrument busses.
Is your master ready for Spotify? Don’t guess your loudness. Drop your track into the CheckMyMix analyzer to get an instant, browser-based LUFS report and see exactly how much headroom you have left.
Check My Mix – Free