By NaJade · DJ in Bangkok · Published June 30, 2026
Everything you need to buy to start DJing — and everything you can ignore. One guide, all the answers.
The gear question stops more people from starting than anything else. There are hundreds of products, endless opinions, and a whole industry nudging you to overspend. So here’s the master guide — what you actually need to begin, what each piece does, what to skip, and where to go deeper on every topic. Consider this your complete map to beginner DJ gear in 2026.
You only need four things to start DJing: a DJ controller, a pair of headphones, a laptop you probably already own, and free software. That’s a complete, gig-capable setup. Everything else — speakers, turntables, mixers, pro software — is optional and can wait until you know you’re sticking with it.
The Four Essentials
Strip away the noise and a complete beginner setup is just four things. A controller does everything you need to learn, costs a fraction of a modular rig, and fits on a desk — which is why controllers now make up the large majority of beginner purchases, with around 60% of DJs on Pioneer/AlphaTheta hardware.
1. A DJ Controller
The heart of your setup — an all-in-one box of jog wheels, mixer, EQ, and pads that plugs into your laptop. A two-channel unit is all a beginner needs. The best DJ controllers for beginners covers specific picks, and my DDJ-FLX4 review digs into the most-recommended model. Curious how controllers compare to club gear? See CDJ vs controller.
2. DJ Headphones
Essential — they’re how you cue and beatmatch the next track before the crowd hears it. Look for closed-back, swivel cups, and a punchy low-end. Full picks in the best DJ headphones for beginners guide.
3. A Laptop + Software
A mid-range laptop you already own is plenty, and the software is free — rekordbox or Serato DJ Lite ship with your controller. Unsure which? My rekordbox vs Serato guide breaks it down.
4. A Way to Hear Your Master Mix
You can learn entirely in headphones, so speakers are optional at first — see do you need speakers to start DJing. When you add them, how to connect a controller to speakers walks through the wiring.
Putting It All Together
Once you know the pieces, the next step is assembling them into a space you’ll actually use. My home DJ setup guide covers the complete rig, laptop specs, and how it all connects — plus the single most underrated tip: set up somewhere you can sit down and play instantly.
What You Can Skip (For Now)
Just as important as what to buy. As Digital DJ Pool puts it, almost everything the gear stores push is optional until you’re sure you’re committed. As a beginner you don’t need:
- A separate mixer — built into your controller.
- Turntables or CDJs — now a specialist choice; controllers teach the same skills for far less.
- A big PA system — overkill for home; venues provide their own.
- An external audio interface — your controller is your sound card.
- Paid software — the free versions do everything you need.
Buying on a Budget (and in Thailand)
You can build a real setup affordably. For the budget breakdown see best budget DJ setup in Thailand, and for where to actually buy locally — shops, online, warranty tips — see where to buy DJ gear in Bangkok. As ZIPDJ notes, gear comes in every budget, so you can start without breaking the bank and upgrade later.
The Full Beginner Gear Library
Every gear topic, in one place — bookmark this and work through whichever you need:
- Best DJ Controllers for Beginners
- Pioneer DDJ-FLX4 Review
- Best DJ Headphones for Beginners
- Rekordbox vs Serato
- Do You Need Speakers to Start DJing?
- How to Connect a DJ Controller to Speakers
- CDJ vs Controller
- Home DJ Setup Guide
- Best Budget DJ Setup in Thailand
- Where to Buy DJ Gear in Bangkok
A Note From NaJade
If you take one thing from this guide, let it be this: the gear is not what’s stopping you. A controller, headphones, and the laptop you already own is a complete setup that has taken people all the way to club gigs. I see so many beginners delay starting because they’re waiting to afford the “perfect” rig — but the perfect rig doesn’t exist, and it’s not what makes you good. Buy the essentials, set them up somewhere you’ll use them, and start tonight. You can always upgrade later; you can’t get back the months you spent waiting.
Got your gear sorted? The skills are next — work through my full how to learn to DJ guide, starting with how to beatmatch. And if you’d like a guided start, my DJ lessons run in person in Bangkok or online over Zoom.
Frequently Asked Questions About Beginner DJ Gear
What DJ gear do I need to start as a beginner?
How much does beginner DJ equipment cost?
Do I need turntables to learn to DJ?
What’s the most important piece of DJ gear?
Can I start DJing without speakers?
Where should I buy DJ gear?
About the Author
NaJade is a Bangkok-based DJ playing progressive house, melodic EDM, pop, and Thai music across clubs, rooftops, and weddings in Thailand. He teaches beatmatching and mixing to beginners both in person in Bangkok and online over Zoom. When he’s not behind the decks, he’s documenting the journey on YouTube, Instagram, and TikTok.
