What is Stereo Width?
Stereo width describes how broadly a mix or individual element spreads across the left-right panorama, creating a sense of spaciousness and immersion.
How It Works
Why It Matters for Your Mix
Stereo width is what makes a mix feel expansive and immersive on headphones and speakers alike. A well-managed stereo image places each element in its own space across the panorama, reducing masking and giving every instrument room to breathe. Wide mixes literally sound bigger and more expensive — which is why stereo enhancement is such a tempting tool. However, width must be balanced with focus and mono compatibility. A mix that is artificially widened to extremes will sound impressive on headphones but may collapse into a thin, hollow mess on a Bluetooth speaker or phone. The best mixes achieve width through deliberate arrangement and panning rather than heavy-handed stereo widening plugins — keeping the center strong and solid while using the sides for ear candy and spatial detail.
Common Mistakes
Over-widening the entire mix
Applying stereo width enhancement to the master bus pushes everything outward, hollowing out the center and destroying the foundation of the mix. Widen individual elements selectively — background vocals, pads, room mics — and leave the lead vocal, bass, kick, and snare centered and solid.
Ignoring mono compatibility
Many stereo widening techniques introduce phase differences that cause partial or complete cancellation when summed to mono. Always check your mix in mono — if elements disappear or the low end thins out dramatically, your stereo processing is creating phase problems that will affect playback on mono devices and club systems.
Making the bass wide
Low frequencies below 150-200 Hz should almost always be mono. Stereo bass information causes phase cancellation on playback systems, wastes headroom, and creates uneven bass response depending on listener position. Keep the sub and bass guitar centered — save the width for mid and high frequencies.
How We Analyze This in Your Mix
RoastYourMix measures the stereo correlation coefficient, left-right balance, and mid/side energy ratio across your entire mix. We analyze the width distribution per frequency band to detect issues like stereo bass (which causes phase problems) or an overly narrow midrange. We flag mixes with low or negative correlation values that will collapse in mono, and highlight frequency ranges where the stereo image is unnaturally wide or collapsed.
See Stereo Width in Action
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