Specific steps to diagnose and fix harsh highs in your Cubase mixes
Harsh highs make your mix fatiguing to listen to. The 2-5 kHz range is where our ears are most sensitive, and even a small buildup here makes everything sound abrasive.
In Cubase, harsh highs is caused by high-mid frequencies (2-5 kHz) being too aggressive. This is a universal mixing issue — it happens regardless of which DAW you use. The problem is in the audio itself, not the software.
Upload your mix to MixDiagnose and you'll get an instant report showing exactly where the problem frequencies are, how severe the issue is, and what to do about it. No guesswork.
Upload your track and find out exactly what's causing your harsh highs — in seconds.
Analyze My Mix Free →Apply this EQ setting to fix harsh highs:
Frequency: 4 kHz | Q: 1.5 | Gain: -2 dB
Harsh highs make your mix fatiguing to listen to. The 2-5 kHz range is where our ears are most sensitive, and even a small buildup here makes everything sound abrasive. This is one of the most common issues we see in mixes analyzed on MixDiagnose. The good news: it's easy to fix once you know where the problem is.
After applying the fix, upload your corrected mix to MixDiagnose again. The before/after comparison shows you exactly how much you improved. You'll see the severity drop from Critical to Moderate to Ideal.
Get an instant mix diagnosis with specific, actionable fixes.
Try MixDiagnose Free →Can MixDiagnose detect harsh highs automatically?
Yes. Upload your track and the analysis report will flag harsh highs with a severity grade (Critical, Moderate, Minor, or Ideal) and give you the exact EQ settings to fix it.
Is harsh highs a Cubase-specific problem?
No. Harsh Highs is a mixing issue that can happen in any DAW. The fix is the same regardless of whether you use Cubase, Ableton, FL Studio, or any other software.
How do I know if my mix has harsh highs?
Common signs include: your mix sounds unbalanced, it doesn't translate well across different speakers, or it doesn't sound like professional releases. MixDiagnose gives you an objective analysis.