Forget Spotify: These 5 Designer Turntables Are the Real Reason Vinyl Is Having a Moment

Vinyl outsold CDs in the U.S. for the first time since 1987 back in 2022, with 41 million records moved compared to 33 million compact discs. That number was not driven by audiophiles chasing warmer bass response. It was driven by people who missed the ritual: pulling a record from its sleeve, lowering a needle, and sitting with an album the way its creators intended. Streaming made music frictionless, and in doing so, it made music forgettable.

The turntables on this list understand that tension between convenience and ceremony. None of them are trying to replace a Spotify subscription, and none of them should. What they offer instead is a physical relationship with music that no algorithm can simulate, wrapped in design languages that range from invisible minimalism to brutalist sculpture. These five are worth the counter space.

1. Miniot Black Wheel

The turntable has not changed much in form since the 1970s: platter, tonearm, plinth, visible mechanism. Miniot’s Black Wheel throws all of that away. Every electronic and mechanical component sits inside a thin circular body that disappears completely once a record is placed on top. What remains visible is the record itself, spinning in what looks like mid-air.

Standing the Wheel upright amplifies the illusion, turning a turntable into a floating disc of sound. A tactile Slide Track hidden along the edge handles volume, track selection, and even stylus weight adjustment through a single physical interface. Slide or push, and the controls respond without ever breaking the visual spell. Despite the impossibly slim profile, Miniot has not sacrificed audio quality for the sake of the trick, which is the part that separates this from a design exercise.

What we like

The disappearing-body design makes the record the only visible element, turning playback into a visual experience as much as an auditory one.
The hidden Slide Track control system is intuitive and tactile, eliminating buttons and knobs without removing physical interaction from the equation.

What we dislike

The minimal form factor means no dust cover, leaving the record and stylus exposed to the environment between listening sessions.
Repairing or servicing the internals of such a tightly integrated body is likely far more complex than working on a traditional turntable.

2. Vivia CD Turntable

Here is where this list takes a deliberate left turn. Vivia is not a vinyl turntable at all. It is a turntable designed for compact discs, and the audacity of that idea is exactly why it belongs here. The concept takes the ritualistic appeal that drove vinyl’s comeback and applies it to a format that the industry abandoned in favor of streaming, even though CDs deliver superior audio clarity to most compressed digital files.

Vivia reimagines the CD listening experience as something tactile and intentional. Loading a disc, watching it spin, and physically interacting with playback controls recreates the ceremony that made vinyl appealing again, but for a format that has spent two decades collecting dust in storage boxes. The design borrows the visual grammar of analog turntables (the platter, the visible rotation) and translates it into a CD context that feels more like a statement about how we consume music than a product trying to compete on specs alone.

What we like

Visual design language borrows from analog turntables in a way that makes CD playback feel deliberate and special rather than outdated.

What we dislike

This remains a concept with no confirmed production timeline, pricing, or technical specifications to evaluate.
CD collections have shrunk dramatically, so the audience for a premium CD turntable is narrow compared to the growing vinyl market.

3. McIntosh x Sun Records Limited Edition MTI100

McIntosh has been building audio equipment since 1949, and the MTI100 carries that lineage into a format that appeals to listeners who want a complete system without a rack full of separates. This special edition, created in collaboration with Sun Records (the label that launched Elvis Presley, Johnny Cash, and Jerry Lee Lewis), packs a turntable, preamplifier, and amplifier into a single integrated unit with Bluetooth and auxiliary inputs.

The catch, and it is a deliberate one, is that speakers are not included. McIntosh recommends pairing with their own XR50 bookshelf or XR100 floorstanding speakers, but the unit connects to any audiophile-grade loudspeaker or even a pair of headphones for private listening. That flexibility is the real design move here. Instead of locking buyers into a closed ecosystem, the MTI100 acts as a hub that adapts to whatever speaker setup already exists in a room. The Sun Records branding adds a layer of music history that gives the limited edition a collectible weight beyond its audio performance.

What we like

The all-in-one integration of turntable, preamp, and amplifier eliminates the need for a multi-component audio rack while preserving high-fidelity output.
Bluetooth and auxiliary inputs mean the unit pulls double duty as a hub for digital sources alongside its vinyl playback function.

What we dislike

Speakers sold separately means the total system cost climbs well above the sticker price, especially if pairing with McIntosh’s own recommended models.
The limited edition Sun Records branding, while collectible, adds a premium that does not change the underlying audio performance of the base MTI100.

4. Samsung AI OLED Turntable

Samsung’s concept entry takes the turntable form factor and fills it with a 13.4-inch circular OLED touchscreen, turning the platter into a display surface that shows images, videos, and ambient visuals while music plays. It is part music player, part art installation, part conversation piece, and it makes no apologies about prioritizing spectacle over audiophile purity.

The circular OLED display becomes the centerpiece of whatever room it occupies, commanding attention in a way that most modern tech actively avoids. Imagine hosting friends and having the turntable surface shift between album art, ambient animations, and visual patterns that respond to the music. The design asks whether a turntable needs to be functional in the traditional sense to earn its place in a room, or whether the experience around the music matters just as much as the playback itself. Samsung has not confirmed production plans, but as a direction for where music hardware could go, this concept is more provocative than most finished products.

What we like

The 13.4-inch circular OLED display transforms a turntable into a visual centerpiece that adds ambiance to any room, not just sound.
The concept pushes the definition of what a music player can be, treating the listening experience as multi-sensory rather than purely auditory.

What we dislike

Concept status with no production timeline means this exists as a provocation rather than something listeners can actually buy and use.
The emphasis on visual spectacle raises questions about whether audio quality is a priority or an afterthought in the design.

5. RA84 Reycycled Plastic Turntable

Ron Arad’s original Concrete Stereo from 1984 was a brutalist statement piece that treated audio equipment as sculpture. Stu Cole’s RA84 revives that same energy, but swaps the concrete for recycled plastic that mimics the look and weight of stone so convincingly that the difference is nearly impossible to detect without touching it. Available in concrete grey or a black finish that reads like expensive terrazzo, the RA84 is a turntable that doubles as furniture.

The material choice is more than an environmental gesture. That heft and density kill vibration, which is the enemy of clean vinyl playback. Recycled plastic performs surprisingly well acoustically in this application, delivering isolation results that rival traditional stone or concrete builds. Built-in speakers make this a complete system out of the box, and the deliberately chipped corners reveal the recycled material’s texture in a way that turns sustainability into a design detail rather than a hidden compromise. Cole’s execution proves that environmental responsibility and luxury do not need to compete with each other.

What we like

Recycled plastic construction achieves the vibration-dampening performance of concrete while being lighter and more environmentally responsible.
Built-in speakers deliver a complete, ready-to-play system that does not require separate components or additional purchases.

What we dislike

The brutalist aesthetic is polarizing, and the sheer visual weight of the RA84 will dominate a room whether the owner wants it to or not.
Built-in speakers, while convenient, limit upgrade paths for listeners who want to evolve their audio setup over time.

The needle and the algorithm

These five turntables (and one very bold CD player concept) share a common argument: that music playback is a designed experience, not just a data delivery mechanism. Streaming solved the problem of access. Every song ever recorded lives in a pocket now. But access without friction created a generation of listeners who consume music the way they scroll feeds, passively and endlessly. The turntable is the antidote to that passivity.

What makes this current wave of designer turntables different from the vinyl nostalgia of a decade ago is the ambition of the design thinking behind them. These are not retro objects cosplaying as vintage gear. They are new ideas about what a music player can look like, what it can be made from, and what role it plays in a room and a life. The best turntable in 2026 is not the one with the flattest frequency response. It is the one that makes someone sit down and listen to an entire album, start to finish, without reaching for their phone.

The post Forget Spotify: These 5 Designer Turntables Are the Real Reason Vinyl Is Having a Moment first appeared on Yanko Design.

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