Once someone has a starter turntable and a shelf of records filling up, the question shifts from ‘how do I play vinyl’ to ‘how do I make it sound better.’ The good news: the two biggest sonic upgrades at this stage — a better cartridge and a dedicated phono preamp — cost under $200 combined and are completely audible. Below are the step-up picks intermediate collectors actually buy, drawn from r/vinyl, r/audiophile, and AudioKarma, and stocked at Austin shops like A&B TV and Living In Stereo. A note on order of operations: a new cartridge needs a tracking-force gauge to set up correctly, so those two go together.
How we pick these gifts
- Audible upgrades first: Every pick measurably or audibly improves sound or protects the collection — no placebo accessories.
- Forum + specialty consensus: Cross-referenced against r/vinyl, r/audiophile, AudioKarma, and Austin’s A&B TV / Living In Stereo.
- Compatibility flagged: Cartridges and preamps note what gear they require, so you don’t buy a mismatch.
- Budget range: from a $14 gauge to a $149 made-in-USA phono stage.
The Cartridge Upgrade (and Its Required Companion)
Swapping the stock conical stylus for an elliptical cartridge is the most audible upgrade at this stage — but you must set tracking force correctly, which is what the gauge is for. Buy these two together.
Audio-Technica AT-VM95E Cartridge
The single most-recommended cartridge upgrade in r/vinyl — its elliptical stylus is a genuine sonic step up from the conical stylus that ships on starter decks. It drops straight into the AT-LP120X and most half-inch headshells, and the stylus is upgradeable on the same body later (swap to the VMN95EN/ML), so the investment scales with the listener.
- Elliptical stylus tracks the groove more accurately, cleaning up highs and inner-groove distortion
- User-replaceable, upgradeable stylus on the same cartridge body — buy once, improve later
- Requires basic alignment and tracking-force setup; not plug-and-play
Neoteck Digital Stylus Force Gauge
Once you fit a new cartridge you must set tracking force correctly or you’ll mistrack and wear records — the Neoteck digital gauge is the budget pick AudioKarma and Steve Hoffman regulars have relied on for years. Its 0.01g resolution is far more accurate than a tonearm counterweight dial. The cheapest item here and arguably the most necessary companion to the cartridge above.
- 0.01g resolution with calibration weight verifies tracking force far better than counterweight markings
- Consistently reported as a years-long reliable workhorse despite the low price
- Cheap plastic build; place it carefully so the platter magnet doesn’t skew the reading
Escape the Built-In Preamp
A dedicated standalone phono stage is the upgrade that surprises intermediate listeners most. Two picks: the made-in-USA favorite, and the budget value champion.
Schiit Mani 2 Phono Preamp
A dedicated phono stage is the upgrade that surprises intermediate listeners the most, and the US-made Mani 2 is the recurring ‘punches way above its price’ pick across AudioKarma and r/audiophile. It supports MM, MC, and MI carts with adjustable gain, so it pairs cleanly with the AT-VM95E and won’t be outgrown if the listener upgrades cartridges later.
- Adjustable gain and loading covers MM, MC, and MI cartridges — survives future upgrades
- Made in California with a reputation for sounding like gear several times its price
- Overkill if their amp/receiver already has a quality discrete phono input
ART DJPRE II Phono Preamp
The budget alternative to the Mani 2 and the long-running ‘best bang for buck’ phono stage on AudioKarma and Vinyl Engine — named Best Budget Preamp by Popular Science three years running. For an intermediate listener who wants to escape a built-in preamp without spending $150, this is the value pick. Front-panel gain control matches a wide range of MM cartridges.
- Roughly a third the price of boutique phono stages while delivering a quiet, clean MM signal
- Front-panel gain control handles varied cartridges and amp inputs
- Plastic chassis and wall-wart power supply feel cheaper than the Mani 2
- MM only at its best; not ideal for low-output moving-coil carts
Protect the Collection (and the New Stylus)
With a growing collection and a new cartridge, maintenance gear earns its keep — clean records, a clean stylus, and archival sleeves.
MoFi Original Master Inner Sleeves (50pk)
The MoFi rice-paper/HDPE sleeve is the 40-year industry standard and the default ‘replace your paper sleeves’ recommendation in r/vinyl, stocked by every serious specialty retailer. Swapping scratchy stock paper sleeves is the cheapest way to protect records you already own. Anti-static three-ply construction reduces surface noise and scuffing.
- Three-ply anti-static construction reduces paper-scuff surface noise on frequently-played records
- The genuine archival standard, not a generic clone of unknown longevity
- Thicker than stock sleeves, so a tightly packed gatefold may not re-fit easily
Onzow ZeroDust Stylus Cleaner
The cult stylus-cleaning pick that comes up constantly in r/vinyl maintenance threads. You simply lower the stylus onto the polymer gel and lift — no fluid, no brushing in the wrong direction. For a listener who just spent money on a better cartridge, keeping the stylus clean directly protects that investment and the records.
- No-brush, no-fluid action eliminates the risk of bending the cantilever during cleaning
- Reusable for years; washable with mild detergent when it loads up with dust
- Some prefer a fluid-based deep clean for stubborn buildup — this is maintenance, not deep cleaning
AudioQuest Carbon Fiber Record Brush
A carbon-fiber anti-static brush is the per-play dust-and-static routine every collection needs, and the AudioQuest design has been a hi-fi classic since 1982. For a listener cleaning records they already own, this is the daily-driver companion to the deeper cleaning and sleeve upgrades — conductive fibers lift dust and discharge static in one pass before the needle drop.
- Two-position design reaches into the groove and discharges static, reducing pops before play
- Decades-proven design trusted by record shops and DJs, not a generic clone
- Surface-dust only; won’t remove fingerprints or pressing residue that need a wet clean
Atlantic Stackable Record Crate
IKEA’s Kallax is the classic vinyl shelf but isn’t sold on Amazon — the Atlantic stackable crate is the Amazon-available analog r/vinyl and Discogs storage threads point growing collections toward. It stores records vertically (the only correct way) and stacks as the collection expands, with carry handles for rotating crates near the turntable.
- Vertical storage with moisture-resistant laminate protects spines and prevents warping
- Stackable and portable, so it grows with the collection instead of being a fixed shelf
- 50-LP capacity per crate fills fast; a large collection needs several units
- Not a furniture-grade Kallax replacement for someone wanting a shelving look
What to skip
Skip exotic ‘tweaks’ that forums treat as snake oil at this stage — green marker pens for disc edges, cryogenically treated cables, and isolation feet that cost more than the turntable. The intermediate sound upgrades that actually matter are the cartridge and the phono preamp; everything else is maintenance. Also skip a second phono preamp if the receiver already has a good discrete phono input — you only need one in the chain.
If you buy just two things, make them the AT-VM95E cartridge and the Neoteck gauge to install it correctly — together under $60 and the most audible jump at this level. Add the Schiit Mani 2 (or the budget ART DJPRE II) and you’ve rebuilt the entire signal chain for cleaner, more dynamic sound. The maintenance gear — MoFi sleeves, the Onzow gel, the AudioQuest brush — protects everything they already own.







