Head-to-head comparison

Adobe Audition vs FabFilter Pro-C 2

Two of the editing tools podcasters reach for. Here's how they differ on pricing, features, audience, and the trade-offs that actually matter day-to-day.

Professional audio workstation built for broadcasters who also live in Premiere.

Best for: Adobe Creative Cloud users

Versatile compressor plugin with vocal-specific style and a great visualizer.

Best for: Vocal compression

At a glance

Field
Adobe Audition
FabFilter Pro-C 2
Best for
Adobe Creative Cloud users
Vocal compression
Price tier
Platforms
macOSWindows
macOSWindows
Audience
Small teamsAgenciesEnterprise
Small teamsAgencies

The honest trade-offs

Adobe Audition

Pros

  • Top-tier spectral and noise repair tools
  • Tight integration with Premiere Pro
  • Industry standard for broadcast workflows

Watch-outs

  • Steep learning curve for newcomers
  • Subscription locks you into Creative Cloud
  • No text-based editing or modern AI features

FabFilter Pro-C 2

Pros

  • Vocal style preset handles speech cleanly
  • Detailed side-chain controls
  • Visualiser makes compression learnable

Watch-outs

  • Pricey for a single compressor
  • Eight styles can cause decision paralysis
  • Stock DAW compressors get most jobs done

Which one should you pick?

Pick Adobe Audition if

You’re building around adobe creative cloud users. Audition is overkill for most podcasters but indispensable for the ones who need it. Multitrack sessions, spectral editing, frequency splitting, and tight Premiere integration make it the right tool if you're already paying for Creative Cloud or producing for video.

Pick FabFilter Pro-C 2 if

You’re building around vocal compression. Pro-C 2 is the compressor most podcast engineers eventually settle on. The Vocal style is excellent on speech, the side-chain controls are deeper than most, and the visualiser teaches you what your compressor is actually doing.

Also worth comparing

Or see all Adobe Audition alternatives.

Frequently asked

What does Adobe Audition do better than FabFilter Pro-C 2?

Adobe Audition's standout is "Top-tier spectral and noise repair tools". FabFilter Pro-C 2 doesn't make that promise — it leans into "Vocal style preset handles speech cleanly" instead. If the first sentence describes your workflow, pick Adobe Audition; if the second does, pick FabFilter Pro-C 2.

What are the trade-offs?

Adobe Audition: steep learning curve for newcomers. FabFilter Pro-C 2: pricey for a single compressor. Whether either matters depends entirely on what you actually need — neither is a deal-breaker by itself.

Can I use Adobe Audition and FabFilter Pro-C 2 together?

Both are editing tools so most teams pick one. Some workflows do combine them — for example, using Adobe Audition for one show or episode type and FabFilter Pro-C 2 for another. Worth trying both free tiers before committing.