Putting reverb on audio in Premiere Pro is quick and simple. Once you know the right place, it takes under two minutes. You can add depth to scenes or give voiceovers a room feel. The built-in reverb effects work right inside your timeline. You do not need to leave the project or open another tool. But before that, you must know that clean audio at the start makes a big difference here. Therefore, recordings from a mic like the Hollyland LARK MAX 2react more smoothly to reverb. You also spend less time fixing noise before adding any effect.
So, if you want to learn the steps, this guide is for you!
Which Reverb Effects Does Premiere Pro Offer?
Premiere Pro includes three native reverb effects under Audio Effects. Knowing which one to reach for first saves time and avoids unnecessary complexity.
|
Effect Name |
Best Use Case |
Complexity |
|---|---|---|
|
Studio Reverb |
Voice-over, dialogue, general content |
Low - adjustable parameters |
|
Reverb |
Legacy projects, basic room presence |
Low - limited control |
|
Convolution Reverb |
Realistic acoustic spaces, film audio |
High - requires impulse response (IR) file |
Studio Reverb is the recommended starting point for most editors. It offers clear, adjustable parameters, runs efficiently on your CPU, and works well across dialogue, music beds, and ambient audio. The steps below use Studio Reverb as the working example.
How to Apply Reverb to an Audio Clip in Premiere Pro?
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Open the Effects panel. Go to Window > Effects to open the Effects panel if it is not already visible in your workspace.


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Find the Studio Reverb effect. Inside the Effects panel, navigate to Audio Effects > Reverb > Studio Reverb. The fastest method is to type “reverb” in the Effects search bar at the top of the panel—Studio Reverb will appear immediately.


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Drag Studio Reverb onto your audio clip. Click and drag the Studio Reverb effect directly onto the target audio clip in your timeline. A thin colored bar or effect indicator (fx) will appear on the clip to confirm the effect has been applied.

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Select the clip and open Effect Controls. Click the audio clip in the timeline to select it, then go to Window > Effect Controls.

This opens the Effect Controls panel, which displays all effects currently applied to that clip.

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Note: The clip must be selected in the timeline for its effects to appear in the Effect Controls panel. If the panel appears blank, click directly on the clip again.
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Expand the Studio Reverb parameters. In the Effect Controls panel, click the arrow next to Studio Reverb to expand its settings. All adjustable parameters will appear below.
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Enable the effect and begin adjusting. Confirm the effect toggle (the small “fx” button) is enabled. Then, click the Edit button next to the Custom Setup option to use parameter sliders, which are discussed in the next section.


How to Adjust Studio Reverb Settings?
Once Studio Reverb is applied and expanded in Effect Controls, these are the parameters that matter most:

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Room Size: Controls how large the simulated space feels. Lower values (under 20) create a subtle room presence suitable for indoor dialogue. Higher values (50 and above) simulate halls or open spaces for cinematic and music use.
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Reverb Mix (Wet/Dry): This is the most important slider. It controls the balance between the original (dry) signal and the reverb (wet) signal. For dialogue and voice-over, keep this below 30% to avoid a muddy, distant sound. For music or cinematic ambience, 40–60% can work well.
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Decay: Determines how long the reverb tail lasts after the sound ends. Keep Decay short (under 1.5 seconds) for natural speech. Longer Decay times (2–4 seconds) suit cinematic scenes or music beds.
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Pre-Delay: Adds a brief pause between the dry signal and the onset of reverb. A small Pre-Delay value (10–20 ms) helps preserve the clarity of speech while still adding a sense of space.
Recommended settings for common scenarios:
|
Scenario |
Room Size |
Reverb Mix |
Decay |
|---|---|---|---|
|
Voiceover / podcast |
15–20 |
15–25% |
0.8–1.2 s |
|
Ambient underscore / music |
40–60 |
35–50% |
1.5–2.5 s |
|
Cinematic scene audio |
60–80 |
25–40% |
2.0–4.0 s |
Start with these ranges, preview playback, and adjust to taste. Subtle changes to Reverb Mix often have the biggest impact on how natural the result sounds.
How to Apply Reverb to an Entire Audio Track? (Instead of Individual Clips)
When a track contains many short clips that all need the same reverb treatment, applying the effect at the track level is far more efficient than dragging it onto each clip individually.
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Open the Audio Track Mixer via Window > Audio Track Mixer.

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Locate the track you want to process and expand its Effects slot (the area labeled with a triangle or dropdown at the top of the track column).


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Click the effect dropdown slot and navigate to Reverb > Studio Reverb.

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Double-click the effect name to open its parameter controls and adjust settings the same way as at the clip level.


Drawback: Using reverb on the track level saves time during editing. It applies one setting across all clips in that track. This can reduce control when each clip needs its own sound.
Tips for Natural-Sounding Reverb in Premiere Pro
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Use less than you think you need: Excessive reverb pushes dialogue into the background and signals amateur post-production. When in doubt, cut the Reverb Mix slider in half.
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Match the reverb to the visual environment: A tiled bathroom calls for a short, bright reverb; an outdoor scene may need almost none at all.
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Apply a gentle high-frequency cut after the reverb: Adding a subtle EQ after Studio Reverb and rolling off frequencies above 10–12 kHz softens harsh reverb tails and sounds more natural.
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Use keyframes to automate Reverb Mix: If reverb needs to fade in during a scene transition or intensify for a moment, right-click the Reverb Mix parameter in Effect Controls and add keyframes to animate the change over time.
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Start with clean source audio: Recordings with low background noise—such as those captured with the Hollyland LARK MAX 2 and its AI Noise Cancellation—give reverb processing a clean signal to work with, resulting in a more controlled and professional output.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why can’t I find the reverb effect in Premiere Pro’s Effects panel?
First, confirm the Effects panel is not filtered. Click the panel menu and make sure it is set to display all effects, not just a specific category. Next, type “reverb” directly into the Effects search bar, which is the fastest way to locate it. If the effect still does not appear, check that your version of Premiere Pro is up to date, as outdated installations can occasionally show incomplete effect libraries.
Can I apply reverb to only part of an audio clip in Premiere Pro?
Yes, there are two ways to do this. The simplest is to split the clip at the points where you want the reverb to start and stop using Ctrl+K (Windows) or Cmd+K (Mac), then apply Studio Reverb only to that isolated segment. Alternatively, keep the clip intact and use keyframes on the Reverb Mix parameter inside Effect Controls to fade the effect in and out at precise points in your timeline.
What’s the difference between Studio Reverb and Convolution Reverb in Premiere Pro?
Studio Reverb uses algorithmic processing to simulate space. It is fast, CPU-friendly, and fully adjustable with straightforward sliders. Convolution Reverb uses recorded impulse response (IR) files to replicate the acoustics of real physical spaces, producing more realistic results at a higher CPU cost. For most dialogue, content creator workflows, and voice-over work, Studio Reverb delivers excellent results without the added complexity of managing IR files.
Conclusion
Reverb adds depth and makes your audio feel more natural. In Adobe Premiere Pro, the main steps are easy to follow from start to finish. All you need to do is open the Effects panel and search for Studio Reverb. Drag it onto your clip and open Effect Controls. Adjust Room Size and Reverb Mix to match the scene. After this, you can try keyframes for changing effects over time. You can also expand your audio chain for more detailed control. This single effect can make dialogue more meaningful and professional-sounding.