Mastering is one of those stages of music production that musicians often treat as a formality — send the mix to a mastering engineer, get a louder, shinier version back, upload it to Distrokid. That worked fine in the stereo-only world. In 2026, with Dolby Atmos spatial audio streaming by default on Apple Music and Tidal, and with platform algorithms increasingly responsive to loudness normalization and stem metadata, the mastering conversation has gotten more complicated.
Stem mastering is at the center of that change. Here is what it is, when it matters, and how to decide whether to ask for it on your next project.
Traditional Mastering: What It Is and What It Does
Traditional mastering starts from a single stereo mix file — the bounce you export from your DAW. The mastering engineer works exclusively with this stereo file, applying tools like EQ, compression, limiting, stereo widening, and noise reduction to make the final master loud, punchy, and competitive with commercial releases. The mastering engineer cannot change the relationship between elements in the mix — if the vocals are too loud relative to the drums, that is baked in. All they can do is shape the overall frequency response and dynamics of the combined signal.
Traditional mastering is fast, affordable (typically $50–$200/song from a reputable engineer), and perfectly appropriate for most situations. If your mix is already well-balanced and your engineer has done their job right, a skilled mastering engineer can make it sound significantly better with the stereo file alone.
What Stem Mastering Is
Stem mastering starts from stems — groups of audio elements exported from your mix session as separate files. A typical stem bundle might include:
- Drums/percussion stem
- Bass stem
- Guitars/keys stem
- Vocals stem
- FX/atmosphere stem
With stems, the mastering engineer can work on each element independently before combining them into a final master. If the low end of the bass and kick drum is competing in a way that makes the master sound muddy, they can address that at the stem level without affecting the rest of the mix. If the vocal stem is slightly bright on the high end, they can control that independently of the guitars.
The result is a master that has more precision than is possible from a stereo file alone — especially for music with complex low-end arrangements, dense mid-range, or layered production where elements mask each other in a standard stereo bounce.
Why Stem Mastering Matters More in 2026
Three developments have made stem mastering increasingly relevant for independent artists in LA:
1. Dolby Atmos Delivery
If you are releasing music that will be mixed in Dolby Atmos — which Apple Music and Tidal now play by default — you need stems. An Atmos mix is spatially placing your elements in three dimensions, which requires the elements to be separated. If you have already organized your stems for mastering, you are most of the way to being Atmos-ready. Studios like The Recording Club, which have dedicated Dolby Atmos mixing suites, expect clients to bring organized stem bundles to sessions.
2. Streaming Platform Loudness Normalization
Spotify normalizes all tracks to -14 LUFS. Apple Music normalizes to -16 LUFS. Amazon Music targets -14 LUFS. This means the arms race to make your master as loud as possible — which dominated mastering in the early streaming era — is largely over. What matters now is dynamics, clarity, and how your track sounds after normalization. Stem mastering gives engineers more control over how the normalized version of your track sounds, particularly for music with lots of dynamic range or complex low-end.
3. Licensing and Sync Submissions
Music supervisors at streaming platforms, TV shows, films, and ad agencies increasingly request stems alongside the finished master. If you have them organized from the mastering stage, you have a licensable asset that most other independent artists do not have ready. This is becoming a real competitive advantage for artists pursuing sync licensing in LA's TV and film market.
The Cost Difference
Traditional mastering from a solid mid-tier engineer: $75–$150 per song from LA-based engineers, $50–$100 via online services like LANDR Pro or Bandlab Mastering at the automated end.
Stem mastering from the same quality of engineer: $150–$300 per song, because it requires more time and a more complex session. High-end mastering engineers in LA (the kind who have worked on major-label releases) charge $300–$700/song for stem mastering.
For an EP of five songs, traditional mastering might run you $500–$700. Stem mastering for the same project: $750–$1,500. That is a meaningful difference for an independent artist on a tight budget.
When Stem Mastering Is Worth It
- You are releasing to Apple Music and Tidal and want the Atmos mix to be an option. You will need the stems anyway — organizing them for mastering costs you nothing extra.
- Your production is dense and layered: electronic music, hip-hop, pop with lots of stacked elements. Dense mixes almost always benefit from the additional control that stems provide.
- The mix has a problem you cannot fully fix: a kick that is too boomy, a vocal that is slightly too bright, competing bass elements. The mastering engineer cannot fully address these from a stereo file. Stems give them the tools.
- You are pursuing sync licensing seriously. Having organized stems ready to deliver is a professional asset.
- This is a major release — an album, a debut EP, something that represents months of work. The additional cost is worth the additional quality control.
When Traditional Mastering Is Fine
- Your mix is clean, well-balanced, and professionally done. If the elements are sitting right and the stereo image is good, a stereo file gives the mastering engineer plenty to work with.
- You are releasing a quick single to Spotify and SoundCloud and the focus is on getting music out, not on perfecting the final master.
- Budget is tight and the extra $100–$200 per song is genuinely more valuable elsewhere in the production process.
- Your genre is intentionally lo-fi, raw, or DIY — stem mastering might over-polish something that is supposed to sound rough.
How to Organize Your Stems
If you decide stem mastering is right for your project, ask your mix engineer to export stems as part of the session. The standard format is:
- WAV files, 24-bit, at the session sample rate (usually 48kHz or 96kHz)
- Each stem exported at the same length (include silence before the first sound, so stems align perfectly when imported)
- Group by element, not by individual track: drums group together, bass group, all vocals together, etc.
- Label them clearly: "01_Drums_Stem.wav", "02_Bass_Stem.wav", etc.
Most engineers will export stems as a standard part of a professional mix session if you ask in advance. It adds 30-60 minutes to the mixing day but creates an asset you will use repeatedly — for mastering, for Atmos mixes, for remixes, and for sync licensing.
Where to Master in Santa Monica
For traditional mastering, there are several solid online options (LANDR, Bandlab) and LA-based engineers with strong track records who work remotely or from project studios across the city. For stem mastering at a professional level, you want an engineer with a calibrated room and experience with the format.
For artists at The Recording Club, the membership community often includes mastering engineers who work out of the facility — one of the practical benefits of a shared creative space over a transactional hourly studio. And because TRC includes a Dolby Atmos suite, the path from organized stems to a finished Atmos master is a single session away rather than a multi-facility coordination challenge.
For a full picture of recording costs and studio options in the area, see our complete guide to recording studio costs in LA and our studio comparison page.