If you are an acoustic duo or a 3-piece rock band with four mics total, this app is a cannon to kill a mosquito. You’d be better off with a free tool like Google Drawings or even a sharpie and paper. The learning curve for simple tasks is steep.
Your drummer is in Chicago, your singer is in Austin. With Stage Plot Pro, you have to email the file back and forth. There is no web version, no Google Docs-style collaboration. For a 2024 workflow, this hurts. You end up exporting PDFs to a shared Dropbox folder like a caveman. Stage Plot Pro Full
You play more than 30 shows a year, work with multiple monitor engineers, or manage a band that carries its own IEM rig. The time you save making input lists will pay for the $50 in one rehearsal. If you are an acoustic duo or a
Verdict: 8/10 (Powerful for pros, overkill/dated for beginners) The Short Take If you’ve ever shown up to a gig where the sound guy had no idea you had three vocal mics, a banjo, and a theremin, you know why stage plots matter. Stage Plot Pro has been the quiet workhorse of touring for over a decade. After spending a month with the full version, it’s clear: this tool is incredibly powerful for creating professional input lists and stage layouts, but it feels like software from 2012. For serious touring acts and rental houses, it’s essential. For the weekend warrior with an iPad, it may feel clunky. What’s Under the Hood Stage Plot Pro is a vector-based diagramming tool built specifically for live audio. It is not a general drawing app (like Visio or Canva); it’s a dedicated tool for sound engineers. Your drummer is in Chicago, your singer is in Austin
The full version lets you create custom vector symbols. If you use a weird synth, a specific pedalboard rig, or a vintage mic, you can draw it once and save it. This is a lifesaver for tribute bands or experimental acts.
You play small clubs with a simple PA, or you just need a rough sketch. Use the free trial (14 days) first. It’s not for everyone.