Transistor vs Adobe Podcast
Side-by-side comparison of Transistor and Adobe Podcast.
Podcast hosting built for multiple shows and teams
AI audio cleanup and transcription for podcasters
What they are
Transistor
Transistor is a podcast hosting platform that distributes episodes to Spotify, Apple Podcasts, and other directories from a single dashboard. It suits independent creators, agencies, and companies running more than one show, since all plans include unlimited podcasts. The analytics are clean and honest, though they stop short of the granular listener-behavior data that some larger platforms offer.
Adobe Podcast
Adobe Podcast is a browser-based audio tool that removes background noise, enhances voice recordings, and generates transcripts using AI. It targets podcasters, educators, and video creators who record in less-than-ideal environments. The Enhance Speech feature genuinely improves muddy recordings, though heavy processing can occasionally make voices sound slightly synthetic. A free tier exists with usage limits, and the paid plan sits under the Adobe Creative Cloud umbrella.
if you need analytics and hosting. Starts at 19/mo.
- +Unlimited podcasts on every paid plan, not gated by tier
- +Automatic distribution to all major directories
- +Clean, fast dashboard with no clutter
if you need transcription and hosting. It has a usable free tier to start with.
- +Enhance Speech tool noticeably improves low-quality microphone recordings
- +Browser-based, so no software installation required
- +Generates accurate transcripts that can be edited to trim audio
Which to choose
Transistor and Adobe Podcast both cover hosting, so this is a real either-or for some teams. The right pick depends on which one's wider feature set and pricing fit how you work.
Read the full reviews for Transistor and Adobe Podcast.
Pricing checked 3 Jun 2026.