Tech
Rega Aos Brings Aura Reference DNA to Its MC Only Phono Preamplifier
Rega has been on a quiet tear lately. First it shocked its traditionally sensible customer base with a flagship preamplifier and power amplifier combo that wanders deep into five-figure territory. Now it pivots back toward vinyl loyalists with something far more on brand, but still firmly premium. Enter the new Aos MC, a moving coil only phono stage derived directly from the company’s reference Aura.
First shown at the Bristol Hi-Fi Show 2026, the Aos MC borrows heavily from the £4620 Aura MC stage in both circuit topology and layout, with the stated goal of bringing listeners closer to that reference level performance without crossing into cost-no-object insanity. U.S. pricing has not been finalized, but expectations place it in the $2300 to $2500 range when it lands stateside; a bracket packed with serious competition from MOON by Simaudio, Pro-Ject, Musical Fidelity, EAT, EAR, MoFi Electronics and others.
Rega promises exceptional definition and greater realism, and the Aos MC is designed to partner with a wide range of moving coil cartridges thanks to flexible gain and loading options. The question is not whether Rega knows how to build a phono stage — it clearly does. The question is whether Aura-inspired circuitry at roughly one third the price can dominate one of the most competitive segments in high performance analog right now.
Aura Inspired Circuitry Targets $3,000 High End Market
The Rega Aos MC is a two stage, all analogue moving coil phono preamplifier with no digital control circuitry in the signal path. The layout is deliberately simple and tightly organized to avoid unnecessary components that could compromise performance. At its core is a symmetrical, complementary Class A amplifier using parallel low noise FETs configured as compound pairs.
That choice is not cosmetic. FET devices ensure that no bias current flows into the cartridge coil, which protects the cartridge’s magnetic geometry and avoids altering its behavior. The input circuit also minimizes coupling components between the cartridge and the first gain stage, further reducing opportunities for signal degradation.
Loading and gain flexibility are handled in a straightforward, hardware based way. Users can select resistive loading at 70, 100, 150, or 400 ohms, and capacitive loading at 1000 or 4300 pF, allowing the Aos MC to accommodate a broad range of moving coil cartridges.
Gain can be switched between 69.3 dB and 63.5 dB, a 6 dB difference accessible from the rear panel, where you will also find RCA inputs and outputs. RIAA equalization accuracy is rated at better than ±0.2 dB from 65 Hz to 70 kHz, with a frequency response extending from 17.5 Hz to 100 kHz. THD is specified at 0.03 percent.
The half width aluminum enclosure is not just about aesthetics. It provides shielding against stray RFI while keeping the footprint compact at 220 x 80 x 330 mm and 2.9 kg. A self adjusting servo control compensates for temperature variations to maintain stable operation, and an automatic standby mode reduces power consumption to 0.4 W when idle, though it can be disabled via rear panel dip switches. In short, the Aos MC focuses on careful analogue execution, sensible adjustability, and measured performance rather than feature creep.
The Bottom Line
The Aos MC stands out because it keeps the signal path strictly analogue, uses parallel low noise FETs to avoid bias current in the cartridge coil, and offers meaningful loading and gain flexibility without drifting into feature overload. It is clearly aimed at serious moving coil users who care about circuit integrity, RIAA precision, and long term cartridge compatibility rather than app control or digital displays.
At an expected $2,300 to $2,500 in the U.S., it walks straight into competition from the MoFi UltraPhono Pro, EAT E-Glo 2, and Cyrus Audio 40 PPA — three fully featured and well engineered options in the same performance bracket.
If you are running a quality MC cartridge and want something derived from Rega’s Aura platform without stepping into five figure territory, the Aos MC makes a clear case for itself. And for MM users feeling left out, relax. An Aos MM version is on the way.
For more information: rega.co.uk