Schröder is a German high-end audio brand best known for its tonearms, based in Berlin and built around the work of designer Frank Schröder. His first tonearm dates back to his teens, and he has been developing and hand-building tonearms for dedicated audiophiles for decades. The brand’s heritage is firmly rooted in specialist analogue playback rather than mass-market consumer audio.
Schröder’s core products are precision-machined turntable tonearms, made and assembled by hand. These arms are admired for their mechanical refinement, minimalist engineering, and a design philosophy aimed at extracting the most natural, transparent sound from a record without adding much of a sonic signature. In practice, Schröder is associated almost entirely with elite analogue front ends, especially for serious turntable setups.
In the market, Schröder sits at the very top end of the niche boutique segment. It is not a broad hi-fi brand and does not appear to compete in mainstream categories like speakers, DACs, or headphones. Instead, it has a reputation among audiophiles as a reference-level maker for listeners who value craftsmanship, rarity, and uncompromising analog performance.