The Best MIDI Controllers for Synths, Guitars, and More (2026)

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The Best MIDI Keyboard

Arturia Keylab MK3

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Best Budget Keyboard

M-Vave MPK Mini IV

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A Flexible, Space-Saving USB MIDI Controller

M-Audio Oxygen Pro Mini

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A Travel-Friendly Wireless MIDI Controller

Korg NanoKEY Studio

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Whether you’re a modular synth nerd or the bassist of a troglodyte doom metal band, the chances that you’ve encountered a device that utilizes MIDI are nearly 100 percent at this point. The communication protocol is over 40 years old, yet it’s hardly changed at all since head honchos from Roland, Oberheim, and Sequential Circuits collaborated on a universal language that musical instruments can use to talk to one another despite being produced by different brands. Its low-tech nature is its greatest strength, making it a quick and reliable way to control a synth or a rack of guitar pedals with hardly any digital bandwidth at all. MIDI is great because it’s barely evolved at all.

What has evolved is the cottage industry of musical accessories that utilize MIDI to do wild and wonderful things. Are you keen on adjusting filters and delay times with the swipe of your hand like a deranged conductor? There’s a MIDI gadget for that. Do you idolize U2’s The Edge and his ability to change his guitar tone drastically with just one foot press? There’s a MIDI pedal for that. Would you rather not schlep around a fortress of synths a la Keith Emerson just so you can access an organ and an electric keyboard for that wedding gig on the horizon? There’s a MIDI controller (and a synth module or two) for that.

MIDI devices come in all shapes and sizes, and I’ve tested dozens in my decade-long pursuit for a setup that’s intuitive, robust, and easy on my aching back. I dabble in both guitar effects and amateur synth shenanigans, so a heavy preference is given to items that can double-dip in both worlds for a Spartan setup. Some are inspiring and bizarre, while others are unsexy and utilitarian, yet wholly essential for ever-growing rigs with complicated routings and connections. My outlook for this entire setup may require reappraisal once MIDI 2.0 gets off the ground, but until then here’s a list of my most beloved MIDI gear that I work with on a daily basis.

Into making and listening to audio? Be sure to check out our lists of the Best DAWs, Best USB Microphones, Best Headphones, and Best Bookshelf Speakers.

  • The Best MIDI Keyboard

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    Photograph: Terrence O'Brien

    Various WIRED staffers and freelancers have used Arturia's KeyLab keyboards for three generations, and we've been impressed since the start.

    The robustly built third-gen boards feature excellent MIDI integration, a very comfortable keybed, and tight integration with Arturia's excellent Analog Lab software. You can use it to do any task you want with the keyboard and MIDI, or you can just use Arturia's fantastic sound pack to choose between most of the world's most famous synths, keyboards, and pianos. —Parker Hall

  • Best Budget Keyboard

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    Akai is famous for the MPC series or samplers, which gave aspiring hip-hop producers an interactive and tactile way to chop samples and cook up beats decades before laptops and iPads completely democratized the process. The iconic grey rubber pads on the MPC are lauded for their feel and response, and you’ll find eight of them planted conspicuously at the center of what may be the greatest budget MIDI controller we’ve seen yet.

    Priced at just $100, the latest unit in Akai’s MPK series makes a bold statement by packing an incredible suite of features into a sleek and sturdy unit that has no business costing as little as it does. The pads alone are worth the price, but the many subtle flourishes only the oldest of heads (who remember the days of downloading drivers for such units) are truly remarkable when you lay them all out.

    Pitch is controlled with a smooth, snappy wheel rather than a mushy touch strip or joystick. Various function buttons are backlit and easy to understand without any instruction. DAW control is seamless with built-in transport controls. And to top it all off there’s even a standard five-pin MIDI DIN output on the back, which is increasingly rare now that everyone has rolled over and accepted the forced march into 1/8-inch TRS MIDI ubiquity.

  • A Flexible, Space-Saving USB MIDI Controller

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    The golden age of cheap and awesome USB MIDI controllers is upon us. The quality of these units, which are usually two to three octaves with a small array of knobs, faders, and rubber trigger pads, is rising exponentially while the prices are sinking. The sweet spot for portability and functionality is the $100 to $200 range, with our pick in this crowded market being the M-Audio Oxygen Pro Mini.

    This 32-key controller boasts eight pads, four knobs, four faders, transport controls, scale and arpeggiator options, and a 1/8-inch TRS MIDI output that marks a much-needed improvement over older units that only offer a USB-A connection. If you need more knobs (eight) and less keys (25) then the Arturia MiniLab 3 ($120) is a worthy replacement.

  • A Travel-Friendly Wireless MIDI Controller

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    USB MIDI keyboards are getting sleeker and sexier by the day, but it’s still as conspicuous as ever to whip one out and program beats at a coffee shop or an airport terminal. The Korg nanoKEY studio is as good as it gets at this moment, and although the keybeds are a bit chintzy, the combo of generous battery life and Bluetooth connectivity makes the tradeoff worth it.

    It’s the first MIDI controller I didn’t feel silly using while set up on the tray table of a Southwest Airlines flight, and it’s inconspicuous enough that you can tap away it it while sipping a latte without coming off as a boorish weirdo who’s dying to be asked about his silly little hobby.

  • A Bluetooth-Enabled MIDI Foot Pedal

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    Perhaps the oldest and most storied genre of entrant in this list, MIDI foot pedals have existed in some form or another since the final days of the hair metal era. A traditional setup involves a rack mounted switcher, which has five or more loops in which a guitar tech would place an analog pedal like a Tube Screamer or a Big Muff. The rack lurks in the shadows of the stage behind the wall of amps, untouched by the guitarist. Said guitarist then stomps on a foot controller up front to send MIDI Program Change (PC) messages to the switcher, telling it which loops to engage and disengage. One button enables or disables an infinite number of effects, making it much easier to focus on more important tasks like playing guitar, chugging Jack Daniels, or glaring menacingly at your guitar tech.

    MIDI foot pedals have experienced a significant glow-up in the past five years. Out is your weird uncle’s clunky metallic box with a buggy alarm clock-esque display, an arcane programming workflow, and an unwieldy, proprietary power supply. Coming in hot is a new generation of svelte and sturdy boxes with modern connectivity and low-current power options that work with USB-C or traditional 9-volt pedal power. Morningstar was the earliest entrant in this renaissance with their MC series, which was the first such pedal to directly address the needs of modern guitarists with spiffy updates like a simple web-based programming interface and 1/4-inch TRS MIDI outputs for newfangled pedal brands like Chase Bliss, Meris, and Jackson Audio.

    While we recognize that Morningstar walked so others could sprint, our official pick in this genre is the Luminite Graviton M2. When stacked against the MC6 Pro it clocks in at over $100 less; it has built-in WIDI and Wi-Fi, and is a breeze to program via the onboard touchscreen; and its constellation of optional add-ons—like a pair of knobs or buttons you can stick to your guitar to send Control Change (CC) messages while away from your pedals—feel light-years ahead of the clunky MS DOS vibes that most Morningstar fans complain about. The MC6 gets a slight edge with the number of MIDI messages it can send per button (32 versus the M2’s 16), but everything else about the M2 is abundantly more user-friendly than the MC6.

    It took less than 10 minutes to pair the Graviton M2 with my iPad via WIDI, map its buttons to some macro controls in Loopy Pro, and stage an extensive solo jam session that was controlled solely by the M2. I skipped reading the manual and was able to figure out 90 percent of its basic functionality from within the editor on the device itself, which is not something I ever thought would be possible back when I was spending hours programming my Rocktron All Access during the dark ages of the “Indie Sleaze” era.

  • A Pedal That Can Play Keys With Your Feet

    KMI 12 Step2 black device with illuminated padded buttons

    Photograph: Keith Mcmillen Instruments

    One needn’t enjoy the music of Rush to respect the multitasking that happens while the Canadian prog trio (RIP Neil Peart) was onstage spinning impeccable note-for-note re-creations of their studio work. A key component of bassist/vocalist Geddy Lee’s workflow was the Moog Taurus, which is an archaic monophonic synthesizer that’s controlled by an octave’s worth of organ-like foot pedals that sit on the ground under his rack of synthesizers, which he later transitioned to a MIDI-controlled Ableton-enabled computer.

    Newer, heavier bands like Brutus and Russian Circles have carried the torch, the latter utilizing a vintage Taurus up until a band of tweakers ransacked their trailer in 2021. Brian Cook, the bassist of the instrumental metal trio, has since been reunited with his beloved Taurus, but in the meantime he utilized a Keith McMillen Instruments 12 Step paired with a Moog Minotaur Model to re-create the squelching, thundering low-end he’s famous for wielding while he plays a baritone guitar with his hands.

    The 12 Step 2 expands on the original with five-pin DIN input and output, as well as expanded expression options with each of the 12 pedals that are laid out just like an octave on a keyboard. Both the pressure and the tilt of each pedal can be mapped to unique CCs, allowing things like filter, attack, and resonance to be adjusted as you bear down on each press. The computer-based editor is simple to understand, and each pedal can send chords with up to five notes each for a richer sound with minimal tap dancing. You’ll need your own module to generate sounds with the MIDI messages sent by each pedal, but the USB output can be routed into a phone, tablet, or laptop for easy control of synth plugins on any sort of device you have. The 12 Step 2 is light, durable, and thin, making it easy to drop on top of your guitar pedals before you stash them in a road case for safe keeping. The same can’t be said about a Moog Taurus or the Roland PK-6, which is 3 inches high and 10 pounds, versus the 12 Step 2, which is 1 inch high and only 1.25 pounds.

  • An Affordable Bluetooth Foot Controller

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    Any guitarist who’s not a complete Luddite has at least some interest in guitar tech, and one of the most fun and engaging ways to join the rest of us in the future is with wireless MIDI.

    Assuming your phone has a USB-C port, one could easily acquire a cheap 2-channel audio interface to convert their guitar signal to 1’s and 0’s, download an app like Loopy Pro or AUM for a nominal charge, and spend hours derping around with looping, effects, backing tracks, and anything else that vast world of AUV3 plug-ins can provide.

    The Chocolate Plus is an affordable and approachable piece of kit that can translate foot presses into digital gestures on your phone, tablet or computer, with which there is a near-infinite number of things you can do.

  • A Multi-Track MIDI Looper

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    Retrokits RK-008 Real Time Multitrack MIDI Recorder

    If you’ve made it this far you probably understand that MIDI and audio are different things, but we’ll recap for the noobs within the context of live looping to better explain why you need a MIDI looper.

    Imagine you have a drum machine that’s controlled with the trigger pads on your MIDI controller. The audio output of the drum machine is routed to a loop pedal. You step on the looper once to record, then again to playback. If you flub a note it’s back to the drawing board, and there’s no chance of changing the speed of the loop without also messing with the pitch of the recorded audio. As fun as live looping can be, the limitations of looping audio can shackle you to a rigid workflow that’s easy to screw up.

    If you inserted the Retrokits RK-008 between the MIDI controller’s output and the drum machine's MIDI input, you wouldn’t have any of these issues. Hit record on this calculator-sized box to start capturing MIDI, hit play to begin playback, and overdub additional notes or knob turns (in the form of CC data) as you go. The RK-008 can quantize everything to ensure your beats are tight, then it outputs the MIDI track in a loop. If your loop is lagging, simply increase the tempo and it sends the MIDI notes to the drum machine at a faster pace while preserving the integrity of the audio that’s going out. Loops can be exported as MIDI files through the USB-C port that also powers the device, then you can edit them in your favorite DAW and drop them back in for future use.

  • A Wearable MIDI Controller That Responds to Gestures

    Genki Wave thick black ring with small grooves

    Photograph: Genki Instruments

    In the classic 1952 Tex Avery cartoon Magical Maestro, a conniving magician hijacks an opera and uses his magic wand to conduct the proceedings to side-splitting results. The weirdos at Genki have a wearable that aims to replicate that magic with MIDI in the Wave, a rubbery ring that maps hand gestures to MIDI commands for triggering samples, controlling effects or unloading a smoke machine upon a dramatic exit from the stage.

  • A Modular Touchscreen-Based Control Surface

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    If you’ve geeked out over the colorful controllers employed by Daft Punk in the pyramid cockpit in the 2007 concert film Daft Punk: Alive 2007, it should come as no surprise that an enterprising Frenchman was inspired to replicate the experience for the common man. The resulting piece of kit is the Erae Touch, which Embodme mastermind Edgar Hemery has since updated with a version 2.0 that adds even more bells and whistles to his original silicon control surface that’s best described as a hybrid between a Lite-Brite and an iPad but for MIDI.

    An accompanying desktop app allows users to draw in whatever they want on the control surface—faders for control change messages, grids of sample triggers that send notes to external gear, keyboard rolls that only show notes in a selected scale, a multitrack sequencer, and even an experimental “API Zone” that’s open to endless tinkering for the tech-minded music nerd. V2 also adds dedicated buttons with a touchscreen for more intuitive adjustments without a computer connection, a built-in MIDI looper for flexible solo jam sessions, and an upgraded silicon surface that’s a bit more sensitive and sympathetic to pressure-based gestures that can also be mapped to any CC value you’d like.

  • A MIDI Fretboard

    Top view of blue narrow device with large buttons

  • A MIDI Keytar

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    Keytars have always been an endearingly corny tool that most serious synth players would never dare to take on stage. Before the proliferation of wireless MIDI their appeal had a relatively low ceiling, as the freedom they offered was tempered by the necessity of being chained to your sound modules by a MIDI cable. The few that still worked were exorbitantly expensive on the secondhand market (thanks Mute Math!), and their features were stuck in 1985 alongside their aesthetics.

    Alesis fills this sizeable hole in the market with the Vortex Wireless 2, which includes built-in wireless MIDI via the included USB receiver, a respectable programming suite, three octaves of velocity-sensitive keys with aftertouch, eight trigger pads, and programmable accelerometer that can turn Guitar Hero-inspired neck-dives into Control Change values. We’re hoping V3 includes proper bluetooth MIDI and a built-in rechargeable battery, but until this this is a fun and accessible way to bring the quirks of the past into the future.

  • A Controller with Motorized Knobs

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    Courtesy of Melbourne Instruments

    Imagine you’re playing a live electronic set with a laptop running Ableton Live, and you have all sorts of automation controlling things like filter cutoff, resonance, volume, and panning. It’s exciting to manipulate these virtual knobs in real-time as part of your performance, but the position difference between the position of the physical knob and the virtual controllers itself can cause some awkward segues that make your DJ skills look amateurish at best.

    Enter the Roto-Control, which uses motorized knobs that automatically adjust in real-time to match the position of the virtual control to which they’re MIDI-mapped in your DAW. In practice, this is a game-changer when a unique knob is assigned to things like delay time, mix and decay, respectively, while a macro in your DAW controls all three at once. Make changes to the macro and the knobs update automatically in real-time.

    The satisfyingly clicky keys on the Roto-Control can be mapped to MIDI CC, PC or notes as well, and they also react to changes in your DAW when they’re mapped to virtual controllers as well. It sounds deviously simple, but it’s a huge step forward for hardware controllers that need to play well with digital tools.

  • A Set of Modular Knobs and Buttons

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    Anyone with electronic musicians followed on their socials or the simple term “MIDI” in their search history has undoubtedly been fed ads for the Intech Grid series of MIDI controllers. It’s a lineup of six or so 4” x 4” units that have a mix of knobs, faders and buttons–all of which can be assigned to send MIDI, sysex, and all manner of other data via a wired USB-C connection.

    The twist is that the modules snap together via a magnet and assemble like Voltron to create a mega controller that’s powered by that same single USB-C cable. This allows you to mix and match controllers based on your needs at that given time, which is extra handy when you want to scale up or down on the fly.

    The editor software is a bit arcane, but it used to be even more obtuse and bogged down with unconstrained command flows and programming, so it seems Intech is listening to folks like myself who despite being intermediate MIDI masters are still not at all interested in faffing about with NRPN messages and the like. I just want a knob to turn my delay feedback up and down, and I want the knob to match the color of the pedal it’s controlling. A few YouTube videos got me where I needed to go, and in turn I now have an armada of little controllers I can simply snap on when needed, and snap off when I don’t have the desk space.

  • An 11-In/17-Out MIDI Router

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    Conductive Labs MRCC MIDI Router Control Center

    A MIDI splitter probably isn’t necessary if you only have a couple synths or pedals and one controller, but anything beyond that can be quite hairy in terms of latency and routing. The intrepid nerds who run Conductive Labs created a grandiose solution for MIDI problems of all shapes and sizes with the MRCC, which boasts a total of 11 inputs and 17 outputs that include five-pin DIN, 1/8-inch TRS, USB-A, and an optional expansion output that uses CAT-6 to send an extra five outputs up to 50 feet away from the router. Plug your controllers into the inputs on the left, plug anything that should receive MIDI into an output jack on the right, then use the buttons below each to pair things one-to-one, or one-to-many. A sophisticated suite of built-in filters and processors are programmed on the 1.5 x 1.5-inch LED screen, with which you can manipulate MIDI signals with transposition, filter out start-stop commands from a DAW, adjust the velocity of outbound notes, and a handful of other useful tricks you never knew you needed.

    Routing is saved with internal presets that can be recalled with MIDI Program Changes, and it loads your last setup without any extra button-pressing when you start the MRCC up. It lays flat on a desk with its various ins and outs poking out of the top rather than the sides like most other devices, and you can purchase a pair of rack ears to mount it in a 2U rack space if you prefer to keep your desk tidy.

    You’ll need to be a giga-dork to spend close to $450 on a device that processes MIDI routing, but it’s totally worth it if you have an ever-expanding synth or modular setup, or if you hate running around plugging and unplugging things as much as I do. The $179 price tag on the MRCC 880 is a bit more digestible for entry-level MIDI maestros, and our pals at CME have a similar 3x3 box with filtering and routing capabilities that’s a steal at $49.99.

  • An All-in-One Hub

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    CME Pro

    H4MIDI WC Advanced MIDI Interface

    As much as we love the crazy amount of inputs, outputs and routing options on the MRCC, its size, price tag and lack of editing software are turnoffs for aspiring MIDI enthusiasts who just need a little extra help when it comes to routing.

    CME’s H4MIDI WC is about the size of a candy bar, and its 2x2 TRS MIDI ins and outs are compatible with most newer devices that eschew old-school five-pin DIN connection for space-saving ⅛” jacks. The bluetooth add-on is a nice touch for an even nicer price, and the option to expand USB I/O by adding on your own USB-A hub is a subtle stroke of genius you’ll love way more than you expect.

    With a few clicks in the accompanying editor app–which works flawlessly on iOS–I was able to route MIDI clock from Loopy Pro to a few different Teenage Engineering synths, a Roland Juno, and a 1010music Blackbox while also filtering out start/stop commands and using one-to-many CC connections to have a single knob on my Akai MKP Mini IV control filter cutoffs, LFOs, and anything else I needed to adjust on the fly. The H4MIDI WC is a device that anyone who uses MIDI in even the most basic capacity will find incredibly useful.

  • A Bluetooth-Enabled MIDI Splitter

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    Latency is the boogeyman that prevents most musicians from giving serious consideration to MIDI over Bluetooth, aka “WIDI.” CME offers a wide range of products with such low latency that it’s high time for this aversion to cord-cutting to be thrown out the window as rockers who hate cord clutter finally embrace the future. Their most basic unit is the WIDI Master, which is a simple dongle with two five-pin DIN connections chained together, one each for your controller's respective input and output. Pair the WIDI Master with any other WIDI-enabled device, such as your phone, an iPad, or another WIDI Master, and your two devices are ready to talk to each other.

    This is handy for basic use cases, but any guitarist with an array of MIDI-controlled pedals will need more DIN outputs to avoid excessive MIDI chaining that can cause considerable latency that can cascade down the chain. The WIDI Thru6 BT acts as a MIDI receiver that relays incoming messages from a paired Bluetooth device (or its single five-pin DIN input) to its four discrete five-pin DIN outputs. Its diminutive size (2.56 x 3.29 x 1.32 inches) makes it easy to velcro to the bottom of most pedalboards, and it’s powered by a low-draw USB-C connection that’s compatible with most newer power supplies that include a USB jack alongside their typical 2.1-mm 9-volt barrel connector outputs. Paired with some extensive MIDI mapping in Loopy Pro and I’m able to send all kinds of MIDI messages from the iPad at my desktop across the room to my pedalboard, thus manipulating pedals from Chase Bliss, Walrus, Strymon, and Boss without leaving my seat.

  • A MIDI Control App for Your Apple Watch

    Uwyn MIDI Wrist a digital wristwatch with a small screen showing audio settings and controls

    Minimalists who hate superfluous wires and hardware will love this dinky little Apple Watch app that packs a massive punch when used in conjunction with BLE apps on the iPhone it’s paired with. A customizable palate of buttons or knobs display on the face of your watch, making it simple to trigger samples, adjust lighting, or perform any other MIDI action you need from across the room. It’s great as a master tap tempo button for a session that involves a handful of synths, sequencers, and time-based effects that are routed through the MRCC. A button in MIDI Wrist sends a CC that “taps” the tempo in Loop Pro on my iPhone, then this sends tempo data from the phone to a CME WIDI Bud plugged into a USB input on the MRCC. It’s easy to set up and does exactly what it says it does, which is a rare win in the Bluetooth controller space of the modern era.

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