Adobe Podcast
Summary
Recording a remote guest with a decent mic yourself and a laptop-speaker echo from their end used to mean either re-recording or publishing audio that sounds like a phone call from 2009 — Adobe Podcast exists to fix that after the fact, in a browser, without an audio engineering degree.
Adobe Podcast handles two distinct jobs: recording remote sessions with per-speaker track isolation, and cleaning up already-recorded audio through AI enhancement that strips background noise and equalizes mic quality. Both workflows run entirely in the browser — no install, no plugin. The enhancement pass works on uploaded files, which means archived episodes or call recordings get the same treatment as fresh recordings. The free tier includes real functionality, but the ceiling appears quickly for teams with volume: bulk processing and higher export quality are paid-only features. Teams publishing more than a handful of episodes per month hit that ceiling fast.
Bottom line: The right pick for a solo podcaster cleaning up a single guest recording before Friday's publish — the wrong architecture for a newsroom processing fifty interview clips a week, where the per-file friction and paid-tier export limits will force a different pipeline.
Pricing Plans
SubscriptionLast verified 2 days ago- Price
- $9.99/month
- Free Tier
- 30 minutes max duration (up to 500 MB), 1 hour max per day, enhance audio only (no video support), no bulk processing, no strength adjustment, download projects up to 30 minutes (2 projects per day), no download of original recordings, podcast branded audiograms
Free plan
For anyone looking to tell their stories and sound good doing it.
- Enhance Speech (audio only, no video support)
- No bulk processing, upload one at a time
- No strength adjustment
- 30 minutes max duration (up to 500 MB), 1 hour max per day
- Studio: Download projects up to 30 minutes, 2 projects per day
- No download of original recordings
- Podcast branded audiograms
Premium plan
Go further with features designed to speed up your workflow.
- Enhance Speech with video support (MP4, MOV, and more)
- Bulk upload files for enhancement
- Adjust speech, music, and ambience
- Enhance up to 4 hours a day, files up to 1 GB
- Studio: No download limits
- Download original recordings, speaker-separated
- Customize audiograms and captions with themes
- Upload custom backgrounds for audiograms
- Podcast logos and cover art
View full pricing on podcast.adobe.com →
Pricing may have changed since last verified. Check the official site for current plans.
Community Performance Report Card
No community ratings yet. Be the first to rate this tool!
Community Benchmarks Community
Sign in to submit a benchmarkNo community benchmarks yet. Be the first to share a real-world data point.
Pros
Sign in to edit- Per-speaker track isolation during remote recording, so a guest's laptop echo stays on their track and can be cleaned independently rather than blended into a single file that cannot be untangled.
- One-pass AI noise removal on uploaded files, which means a phone-call interview recorded on a journalist's commute can be publication-ready without touching an equalizer or knowing what a noise gate does.
- Automated transcription runs inside the same tool, so the caption file and the cleaned audio export in the same session rather than requiring a second upload to a separate transcription service.
- Browser-based with no install requirement, which means a guest or field reporter can record a high-isolation session from any machine without IT approval or a software download.
- Free tier includes real enhancement functionality, so a solo creator can validate whether the tool solves their specific noise problem before committing to a paid subscription.
Cons
Sign in to edit- Bulk file processing is a paid-only feature, so a newsroom or corporate communications team with a backlog of archived recordings to enhance cannot run them through in batch on the free tier — they either pay or process files one at a time, which does not scale past a handful of episodes.
- Source audio with clipping distortion or heavy codec compression produces unreliable results from the enhancement model — community reports describe the output introducing its own artifacts on badly degraded files. Teams with those inputs switch to dedicated restoration tools that expose per-band controls and let an engineer make manual decisions instead of accepting a single automated pass.
- No API and no self-hosted option means every audio file is routed through Adobe's cloud infrastructure. Any team operating under a data-handling policy that restricts third-party audio processing cannot use this tool at all — not even for testing — and moves to an on-premise or self-hosted audio pipeline instead.
- The enhancement pass does not expose tuning parameters, so when the automated result is wrong — too aggressive on a specific frequency, or misidentifying a musical intro as noise — there is no adjustment layer. The only option is re-upload with a different source file or accept the output as-is.
Community Reviews
Sign in to write a reviewNo reviews yet. Be the first to share your experience.
About
- Platforms
- Web (browser-based; responsive design works on iOS and Android)
- API Available
- No
- Self-Hosted
- No
- Last Updated
- 2026-06-09T17:12:48.188Z
Best For
Who it's for
- Solo podcasters and small creators
- Remote interview-based shows
- Individuals without audio engineering skills
- Teams publishing weekly episodes
- Newsrooms and corporate communications
What it does well
- Remote podcast recording with guest audio isolation
- Cleaning low-quality recordings from phone calls or laptop mics
- Bulk enhancement of archived audio files
- Video podcast audio improvement before publication
- Automated transcription and caption generation
Integrations
Discussion Community
Sign in to commentNo discussion yet. Sign in to start the conversation.
Compare Adobe Podcast
Spotted incorrect or missing data? Join our community of contributors.
Sign Up to ContributeCommunity Notes & Tips Community
Sign in to contributeBe the first to contribute. General notes, observations, gotchas, and tips from people who use this tool day-to-day.
Frequently Asked Questions
- Is Adobe Podcast free?
- Adobe Podcast is a paid tool ($9.99/month). A 30-day free trial is available.
- Is Adobe Podcast open source?
- No — Adobe Podcast is a closed-source tool. Source code is not publicly available.
- When was Adobe Podcast released?
- Adobe Podcast was first released in 2022.
- What platforms does Adobe Podcast support?
- Adobe Podcast is available on: Web (browser-based; responsive design works on iOS and Android).
Hours Saved & ROI Stories Community
Sign in to contributeBe the first to contribute. Concrete time/cost savings, with context. e.g. "Cut my code review backlog from 4h to 45m per week."
Curated lists that include this category
Adobe Podcast is a browser-based audio recording and AI enhancement tool. The core workflow splits into two paths: record a remote session directly in the browser with each speaker’s audio captured as an isolated track, or upload an existing audio or video file and run an AI enhancement pass that removes background noise and normalizes mic quality across speakers. No software installation is required at any step. Transcription and caption generation are also available from within the same interface, so the export step for a finished episode can include both the cleaned audio and a caption file.
The differentiating feature is the AI enhancement engine — the vendor describes it as trained specifically to identify and remove noise artifacts introduced by laptop microphones, phone calls, and untreated rooms, while preserving vocal clarity. For a creator who recorded a guest over Zoom on a kitchen-table laptop, that single pass does work that previously required a noise-reduction plugin, manual EQ, and an ear for what sounds wrong. The docs describe this as a one-click operation on uploaded files, which is accurate to the extent that the tool makes a single automated decision rather than exposing a parameter panel.
Adobe Podcast fits well inside a workflow where the producer is not an audio engineer, the recording environment is inconsistent across guests, and the publication cadence is weekly or lower. It starts showing limits when teams need to process files in bulk — bulk enhancement is a paid-only feature — or when the source audio has problems beyond background noise, such as clipping or codec artifacts from a heavily compressed file, where community reports suggest the enhancement model can introduce its own artifacts rather than cleanly restoring the signal. Teams with those source-quality problems typically reach for dedicated audio restoration software with manual control over individual frequency bands.
Because there is no API and no self-hosted option, every file passes through Adobe’s web infrastructure. Teams with data-handling requirements that prohibit sending audio to a third-party cloud service cannot use this tool regardless of the output quality. There is no downloadable client as an alternative routing path.
