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Record Your First Podcast Episode in Amsterdam
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Published on June 27, 2026

Record Your First Podcast Episode in Amsterdam

You have an idea, a co-host, and maybe a name. Now it is time to actually record your first podcast in Amsterdam — and the good news is you do not need to build a studio in your spare room to do it. Renting a proper space for a few hours gives you treated acoustics, decent microphones, and someone on hand if the gear misbehaves. This guide walks a complete beginner through the whole session, from packing your bag at home to exporting the file before you leave.

The aim here is simple: get a clean, listenable first episode in the can without panicking over knobs you have never touched. If you are still weighing whether to book at all, our Renting a Podcast Studio in Amsterdam: Complete Guide covers the basics — but if you have a slot booked already, read on.

Before you go: prep that makes the session easy (podcast tips beginners)

Most first-timer stress comes from arriving unprepared, not from the recording itself. Do the boring work at home and the studio hour flies by.

  • Write a rough outline. Five or six bullet points and a clear opening line beat a full script you will read stiffly. Know how you want to start and how you want to end.
  • Time it. A first episode of 20–35 minutes is plenty. You can always edit down.
  • Test your audio source. If you are playing clips or doing a remote guest call, bring the laptop, cables, and logins you will need.
  • Charge and pack. Phone, headphones you trust, a water bottle, and any notes on paper so you are not scrolling mid-take.

If you booked a studio that is not stocked with everything, skim an equipment list first so you know what to bring versus what is provided. A quick gear sanity check the night before saves a frantic tram ride back home.

Picking your slot

Book a little more time than you think you need — a two-hour slot for a 30-minute episode is realistic once you factor in setup and a few retakes. Beginner-friendly studios in Amsterdam typically run from roughly €25–€60 per hour depending on neighborhood and how much support is included.

Getting there: arrival and access in Amsterdam

Amsterdam is small and transit is excellent, so plan to arrive 10–15 minutes early to settle in rather than rushing.

  • Centrum and Jordaan studios are walkable or a short tram ride, but bringing gear by car is painful — parking is scarce and pricey.
  • De Pijp and Oost sit on tram lines and are easy by bike if you are travelling light.
  • Amsterdam-Noord is a quick ferry behind Centraal or a metro hop to Noorderpark; loading gear is easier here than downtown.
  • Sloterdijk/Westpoort, Zuidas and Zuidoost are metro- and parking-friendly, which matters if you are hauling a laptop bag, a guest, and a roller case.
  • Westerpark blends a creative-hub feel with reasonable bike and tram access.

If you are unsure which part of the city suits you, our Podcast Studios Across Amsterdam: A Neighborhood Guide breaks down each area by vibe and reachability.

Setting up the mic (podcast studio beginner)

Walk in, say hello, and ask one question first: who runs the levels — me or you? Many beginner-friendly Amsterdam studios have someone who sets everything up, which removes most of the anxiety. If you are self-operating, the basics are quick to learn.

Mic distance and position

  • Distance: keep your mouth about a fist's width from the mic. Too close and you get boomy plosives; too far and the room creeps in.
  • Angle: speak slightly across the mic rather than straight into it to soften hard p and b sounds. A pop filter helps too.
  • Stay put: once you find the sweet spot, try not to lean in and out. Consistent distance equals consistent volume.

Headphones are non-negotiable

Wear the headphones and actually listen to yourself. They let you catch background hum, a rustling jacket, or a chair creak before it ruins a take. If something sounds off, it usually is — fix it now, not in editing.

Getting your levels right

Levels sound technical but the goal is plain: loud enough to be clear, quiet enough to never distort.

  • Do a 30-second test. Talk at your real speaking volume — including your loudest laugh — and watch the meter.
  • Aim for the meter to peak in the upper-middle range, not pinned to the top. If it hits the red, pull the gain down.
  • Match co-hosts. If one person is much louder, adjust each mic separately so neither buries the other.
  • Record a few seconds of silence at the start — that "room tone" is gold for cleaning up edits later.
The single most common beginner mistake is recording too hot. A clip that is slightly too quiet can be raised in editing; one that is distorted is gone for good.

Recording your first episode

Hit record, then sit in silence for three seconds before anyone speaks. Now just talk. A few habits that make editing dramatically easier:

  • Pause, do not say "sorry." If you fumble a sentence, stop, take a breath, and restart the sentence cleanly. The silence is easy to cut.
  • Mark mistakes out loud. A clap or a clear "let's redo that" gives you a findable spot on the waveform.
  • Let your co-host finish. Talking over each other is hard to untangle, especially on a shared mic.
  • Watch the clock loosely. Glance at your outline, but do not let it make you robotic — conversation beats perfection.

Wrapping up before you leave

Do not pack your bag the second you stop talking. The last five minutes of your slot are the most important.

  • Listen back to a chunk — beginning, middle, and end — to confirm both sides actually recorded.
  • Export the file in a lossless format like WAV if offered, and get a backup copy to your own drive or cloud before you leave the room.
  • Note anything to fix for next time: a buzz, a too-quiet guest, an awkward intro.
  • Confirm what is included — some studios offer basic editing or a producer; if costs matter for episode two, our What Does Renting a Podcast Studio in Amsterdam Cost? guide lays out the ranges.

That is it. Your first episode is recorded — and the second one will be twice as fast now that you know the room.

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Ready to record your first podcast in Amsterdam? Find and book beginner-friendly studios across the city — from Noord to De Pijp — on BeShare, and walk in with everything set up and ready to hit record.

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