Best Chorus Plugins (2026): Dimension & Width

Chorus is the sound of the 80s, but it's also the secret to modern width. Whether it's the subtle shimmer of the Dimension D or the thick wobble of the Juno, nothing widens a track quite like it.

Last Updated: January 2026
Henry Foster
By Henry Foster

Henry is a mixing engineer with a background in broadcast and post-production. He obsesses over signal flow, gain staging, and the subtle coloration of analog-modeled plugins. His reviews focus on technical precision, CPU efficiency, and UI workflow.

A good chorus plugin does two things: it adds movement and it adds width. A bad chorus plugin makes your mix sound muddy and out of phase. The trick is finding an effect that creates that lush, thick texture without destroying the center image of your sound.

I’ve tested the top analog emulations to see which ones can turn a thin, mono saw wave into a massive stereo wall of sound. These are the tools that give you that "expensive" shimmer found on classic records.

Quick Summary

  1. 1. Chorus DIMENSION-D Best for Vocal Widen
  2. 2. Chorus Jun-6 Best for Synth Bass
  3. 3. TriceraChorus Best for Dream Pop
  4. 4. MicroPitch Best for Widening
  5. 5. Syntorus 2 Best for Synth Pads
  6. 6. Choral Best for Sound Design
  7. 7. Multiply Best for Transparent Widen
Read more →

Methodology

Who is this for

Working composers and producers who need reliability, speed, and character for professional scoring tasks.

Our testing process

We test every library in actual production scenarios—ranging from writing rapid sketches to delivering commercial pitches. We evaluate how they perform in a dense template, not just in isolation.

Why you should trust us

We buy most reviewed plugins ourselves. Occasionally we receive NFRs for evaluation, but this never guarantees a review or positive verdict. We may earn commissions from links, but our editorial choices are never for sale.

Also considered

For every category, we audition the top 8 to 15 standard options, discarding any that suffer from poor scripting, slow load times, or uninspiring sampling.

Top Picks

Arturia

Chorus DIMENSION-D

Best For: Vocal Widen
Engine VST/AU/AAX
Type Dimension Expander
Size 100 MB
Price $99

The 'Magic Button' of mixing. It makes everything better.

The Dimension D isn't really a chorus. It's a "spatial expander." Standard chorus pedals wobble the pitch, which can make things sound out of tune. The Dimension D uses a unique cross-companding circuit to add subtle stereo width and shimmer without any noticeable pitch modulation. This makes it perfect for vocals and lead instruments where you want width but need to maintain perfect intonation. It essentially "glues" the sound to the speakers.

Arturia's emulation controls are simple: 4 buttons. That's it. Button 4 is the famous "intensity" setting, but I often use Button 1 for just a touch of air. Arturia added a few modern features like a Mix knob and different stereo modes, but the magic is still in just pressing one of those four buttons. It immediately makes a sound feel "produced" and definitive, sitting it perfectly in the stereo field.

Why we love it

Vocals and acoustic instruments where you want width without "seasick" pitch wobble.

Who should skip

You want a crazy, experimental effect. This is subtle and classy.

The Good
  • + Subtle width
  • + Simple to use
  • + No wobble
× The Bad
  • - Limited controls
  • - Not extreme
  • - One trick pony
Famous Uses:
80s Pop Vocals Stevie Ray Vaughan Brian Eno
Arturia

Chorus Jun-6

Best For: Synth Bass
Engine VST/AU/AAX
Type Juno Chorus
Size 100 MB
Price $99

The sound of 1984. Thick, noisy, and beautiful.

If Dimension D is polite, the Juno chorus is rude. This is the sound of every synth-pop hit from the 80s that you know and love. It uses a Bucket Brigade Device (BBD) chip which is notoriously noisy and dark, but that grit is exactly why we love it. Modes I and II offer different modulation speeds, but pressing both (I+II) creates that legendary swirling mono-compatible tremolo that defined a generation of basslines, adding instant attitude to any track.

It adds a low-mid thickness that makes thin digital synths sound huge and analog. I put this on bass patches constantly. It doesn't just widen the sound. It thickens it, adding body and weight. The "Manual" mode Arturia added allows you to tweak the LFO speed and depth, opening up this classic sound to more experimental uses beyond the original three presets.

Chorus Jun-6

Our Verdict

Why we love it

Synth bass and pads that need that specific, thick 80s analog character.

Who should skip

You hate noise. The BBD emulation includes the vintage hiss (though you can turn it down).

The Good
  • + Thick sound
  • + Classic I+II mode
  • + Free (often)
× The Bad
  • - Noisy
  • - Dark tone
  • - Aggressive
Famous Uses:
Eurythmics Tame Impala The Weeknd
Eventide

TriceraChorus

Best For: Dream Pop
Engine VST/AU/AAX
Type Tri-Chorus
Size 200 MB
Price $29

The lushest chorus on the market. Three voices are better than one.

Rack chorus units from the 80s (like the Dytronics) used three separate LFOs to create a sound that was incredibly rich and complex. TriceraChorus brings that "Tri-Chorus" topology to your DAW with modern precision. Instead of a simple up/down wobble, the three voices interact to create a dense, swirling texture that never feels repetitive. It sounds like a liquid pad moving around your head, creating an immersive stereo field that is impossible to ignore.

The interface is gorgeous and "ribbon" optimized, meaning you can morph between settings seamlessly in real-time. The special "Swirl" button adds a unique psychedelic flanging effect that is perfect for guitars. It is the ultimate tool for "Dream Pop" guitars and Shoegaze textures where you want the instrument to sound like it is underwater in a beautiful ocean of modulation, washing over the listener with waves of sound.

TriceraChorus

Our Verdict

Why we love it

Lush shoegaze guitars and ambient pads needing massive, liquid texture.

Who should skip

You want a simple effect. This creates a dense wall of sound.

The Good
  • + Incredible depth
  • + Ribbon morphing
  • + Micro-pitch
× The Bad
  • - Can be muddy
  • - Complex
  • - Expensive
Famous Uses:
Shoegaze 80s Rack Guitar Ambient
Eventide

MicroPitch

Best For: Widening
Engine VST/AU/AAX
Type Pitch Shifter
Size 50 MB
Price $29

The secret to huge vocals. It's not a chorus. It's thicker.

Technically, MicroPitch is a delay/pitch-shifter, but it is used like a chorus by top engineers everywhere. This is the "Van Halen" and "Pop Vocal" trick: You pitch the left side down 9 cents and delay it, and pitch the right side up 9 cents and delay it. The result is a massive, confident stereo image that has zero modulation wobble. It makes vocals sound "produced" instantly without sounding like they are swimming in effects.

Unlike a wobbling chorus, this effect is static, meaning it locks the vocal in place. It creates a solidity that fits perfectly in modern pop mixes where precision is key. If your lead vocal feels thin or small, MicroPitch is the fix 99% of the time. It is the sound of radio.

MicroPitch

Our Verdict

Why we love it

Pop vocals and lead guitars that need to sound huge and wide without sounding "wobbly."

Who should skip

You want that swirling, psychedelic movement. This is a static widening effect.

The Good
  • + Industry standard
  • + Huge width
  • + Time-tested
× The Bad
  • - Not a chorus
  • - One specific trick
  • - Old paradigm
Famous Uses:
Van Halen Pop Radio Lead Vocals
D16 Group

Syntorus 2

Best For: Synth Pads
Engine VST/AU/AAX
Type Triple Path BBD
Size 200 MB
Price $65

The tweaker's paradise. Analog tone with digital control.

D16 Group are masters of accurate analog modeling. Syntorus 2 uses three independent delay lines, allowing you to create complex, poly-rhythmic chorus effects that standard units can't touch. You can route the LFOs in different ways, creating movement that feels alive and unpredictable. The inclusion of an analog BBD delay line emulation means it has that dark, warm grit that sits so well in a mix, giving you the best of the vintage world.

It includes a tremolo section as well, allowing for gating and rhythmic pulsing effects using the same modulation sources. I love using this on pads to create a sense of movement that syncs with the track. The UI is skeuomorphic (looks like hardware) which might put some people off, but it sounds absolutely fantastic-thick, creamy, and expensive. It is a true sound design workstation for modulation.

Syntorus 2

Our Verdict

Why we love it

Sound designers and synth lovers who want deep control over every aspect of the modulation.

Who should skip

You just want a preset. This rewards deep diving into the LFO routing.

The Good
  • + Deep sound
  • + BBD emulation
  • + Tremolo included
× The Bad
  • - Complex UI
  • - Learning curve
  • - Heavy CPU
Famous Uses:
Techno Deep House Trance
Native Instruments

Choral

Best For: Sound Design
Engine VST/AU/AAX
Type Multi-Mode Chorus
Size 50 MB
Price Check Site

The overlooked gem. It can do almost everything well.

Choral is part of NI's Mod Pack, and it is criminally underrated. It has different "modes" (Synth, Ensemble, Dimension) that cover all the classic topologies we've discussed with ease. The "Scatter" control adds a unique diffusion effect that blurs the reflections, creating a reverb-like wash inside the chorus. It sounds modern, clean, and incredibly precise, making it suitable for even the most demanding production tasks where clarity is key.

The feedback loop allows it to go into self-oscillation, creating metallic, robotic textures that vintage units couldn't dream of. It is a sound designer's chorus. While it might lack the specific "dirt" of the Jun-6, its versatility makes it the perfect "desert island" chorus plugin if you can only choose one. It handles everything from subtle width to alien landscapes without breaking a sweat.

Choral

Our Verdict

Why we love it

Producers who want one versatile plugin to cover all their modulation needs.

Who should skip

You want a simple vintage button. This has a lot of parameters to tweak.

The Good
  • + Versatile
  • + Scatter mode
  • + Clean UI
× The Bad
  • - Digital character
  • - Less vibe
  • - Generic look
Famous Uses:
Modern Electronic Techno Scoring
Acon Digital

Multiply

Best For: Transparent Widen
Engine VST/AU
Type Phase Randomizer
Size 20 MB
Price Check Site

The best free chorus. Clean, wide, and unique.

Most free chorus plugins are terrible. Multiply is professional grade. It uses a special phase randomization technique to add width without the ugly "hollow" sound (comb filtering) that plagues standard delay-based choruses. This means you can add a lot of effect without your signal getting thin or metallic. It keeps the core tone of your instrument intact while spreading it across the stereo field, which is vital for maintaining punch in a mix.

It includes a built-in equalizer for the effect signal, allowing you to shimmer the highs without making the low-end muddy. This is a pro feature rarely seen on free plugins. If you are on a budget, or even if you aren't, this should be in your folder for when you need clean, transparent width on acoustic instruments or voice that doesn't distract from the performance.

Multiply

Our Verdict

Why we love it

Anyone on a budget, or anyone needing a transparent chorus that doesn't color the sound.

Who should skip

You want vintage grit. This is a very clean, modern digital effect.

The Good
  • + Free
  • + No comb filtering
  • + Built-in EQ
× The Bad
  • - Colorless
  • - Simple
  • - Not vibe-y
Famous Uses:
Podcasts Acousitc Guitar Clean Vocals
Written By

Henry Foster

Henry is a mixing engineer with a background in broadcast and post-production. He obsesses over signal flow, gain staging, and the subtle coloration of analog-modeled plugins. His reviews focus on technical precision, CPU efficiency, and UI workflow.