Insta360's new Mic Pro wireless microphone brings a three-mic array, E-Ink branding display, 32-bit float internal recording, and deep camera integration to the creator audio market starting from $99.
Insta360 has released its new flagship wireless microphone, the Mic Pro, first premiered at NAB Show 2026 in Las Vegas last month. The system goes significantly further than the company's existing Mic Air, adding two features the company claims are firsts for the category: a customizable E-Ink display on each transmitter and a three-microphone array with selectable polar patterns.
The headline feature is a customizable E-Ink display on each transmitter, which will help ease one of the main annoyances surrounding the current generation of heavily branded wireless mics. Via the Insta360 app, users can upload logos, channel art, or talent names to display on each transmitter persistently, even when the unit is powered off.
The E-Ink choice is a practical choice as well as an artistic one: the display consumes power only during image refresh, not while showing a static image, and stays sharp and high-contrast in direct sunlight where OLED screens typically wash out.
Each transmitter integrates three microphones, with DSP combining their input to emulate distinct polar patterns selectable from the receiver or app: omnidirectional for ambient capture, cardioid for vlogging and voiceover, and figure-8 for two-person interviews. Camera-mounted, the cardioid configuration functions as a directional shotgun mic. An onboard NPU handles AI noise cancellation.
Internal recording captures 32-bit float audio to 32 GB of built-in memory per transmitter, providing a safety net against wireless dropout or camera failure. Recordings auto-split every 30 minutes. Stereo internal recording is available, which the company claims to be unique in this class.
Most compact wireless systems cap at two transmitters. Mic Pro supports a 4-to-1 mode (four transmitters to one receiver, four isolated tracks) and a 2-to-4 mode (two transmitters feeding four receivers simultaneously for multi-camera setups). Four-channel output to compatible Sony cameras is available via an optional Camera Adapter (sold separately), delivering 48 kHz 24-bit digital audio across all four tracks.
Timecode sync uses a TCXO oscillator rated at less than one frame of drift across 24 hours. The system connects to DSLR and mirrorless cameras via 3.5 mm audio cable, to smartphones via USB-C or Lightning, and pairs directly with Insta360 X5, X4 Air, Ace Pro 2, and GO Ultra via Bluetooth without a receiver.
Each transmitter delivers 10 hours of standalone use, extending to 30 hours with the included charging case. A 5-minute charge provides 1.5 hours of use.