Between the NT1 5th Gen and SM7dB, the NT1 5th Gen comes out ahead in type and connection, while the SM7dB wins on max spl. Overall, the NT1 5th Gen scores 71.1 and the SM7dB scores 82 on our Mars Score.
Which should you buy?
The SM7dB is the clear pick on raw spec strength, leading by 10.9 points on the Mars Score. The margin is wide enough that the underdog only makes sense if its individual strengths line up with what you specifically need.
Pick the NT1 5th Gen if you care most about type and connection. The biggest gaps in its favor are type, connection.
Pick the SM7dB if you care most about max spl. Its strongest claims are max spl.
Both ship with comparable polar pattern, so those specs don't separate the two — focus on the differences below.
Bottom line: the SM7dB is the safer default. The other model is the right choice only when its specific advantages line up with your priorities.
Why Rode - NT1 5th Gen wins
- ▲Type: Condenser (vs Dynamic).
- ▲Connection: XLR + USB (vs XLR).
Why Shure - SM7dB wins
- ▲Max SPL — 5.63% more. 150 dB vs 142 dB.
Spec comparison
Spec
| Spec | Rode - NT1 5th Gen | Shure - SM7dB |
|---|---|---|
| Type | Condenserlead | Dynamic |
| Polar pattern | Cardioid | Cardioid |
| Frequency response | 20Hz–20kHz | 50Hz–20kHz |
| Max SPL | 142 dB | 150 dBlead |
Connectivity
| Spec | Rode - NT1 5th Gen | Shure - SM7dB |
|---|---|---|
| Connection | XLR + USBlead | XLR |
| Headphone out | truelead | false |
Frequently asked
Spec-level deep dives
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