Zoom UAC-232 — Editorial Review
The Zoom UAC-232 is a 2-in/2-out USB-C audio interface whose headline feature is 32-bit float recording: by using a dual-converter design, it captures both very quiet and very loud signals without you ever having to ride the gain. For unpredictable sources, that's a genuine workflow change.
Featured Video Review
Set-and-forget 32-bit float capture
Sound On Sound and Mixdown describe a simple, good-sounding interface with the same low-noise preamps found in Zoom's F-series field recorders, where 32-bit float gives striking headroom — you can rescue quiet takes and rarely worry about clipping the converters. It's also refreshingly drama-free to plug in and use. In Julian Krause's measurement-based review — featured above — the converter and preamp performance are put on the bench.
Honest cons
- Analog clipping still possible. 32-bit float protects the converters, but the analog input stage can still overload on extremely hot signals.
- DAW support required. The benefit only fully applies if your DAW supports 32-bit float recording; otherwise overloads are real.
- Dual-converter artifacts. The two-converter design can introduce a little noise when switching between low- and high-gain converters.
- Stereo only. With two inputs it's not for tracking larger sessions.
Where this interface fits
- Podcasters and streamers who want a true set-and-forget level workflow.
- Field and event recordists capturing unpredictable, fluctuating sources.
- Solo creators who value clean Zoom preamps and 32-bit float safety.
- Not multi-channel studios, DAWs lacking 32-bit float support, or those needing more than two inputs.
Sources & Citations
- Sound On Sound, "Zoom UAC-232," soundonsound.com (accessed 2026-05-26)
- Mixdown, "Review: Zoom UAC-232 Audio Interface," mixdownmag.com.au (accessed 2026-05-26)
Last verified: 2026-05-26
