Denon DP-500BT Premium Belt-Drive Hi-Fi Turntable with Bluetooth
HomeStore

Denon DP-500BT Premium Belt-Drive Hi-Fi Turntable with Bluetooth

Denon DP-500BT Premium Belt-Drive Hi-Fi Turntable with Bluetooth

$314.65

Original: $899.00

-65%
Denon DP-500BT Premium Belt-Drive Hi-Fi Turntable with Bluetooth

$899.00

$314.65

The Story

A Belt-Drive Turntable Built for Modern Listening

The Denon DP-500BT is a $899 belt-drive turntable with a built-in phono preamp, Bluetooth streaming, and semi-automatic operation. It is available now.

If you want to see it in action before reading, we have a full video review linked above.

Denon DP-500BT Turntable

Who Is the Denon DP-500BT For?

The DP-500BT is built for the listener who wants a capable, easy-to-use turntable that works with a wide range of setups. It is a strong fit if you:

  • Are getting serious about vinyl and want a table that will grow with you
  • Need Bluetooth for headphone listening or a wireless speaker setup
  • Want semi-automatic operation so you are not tethered to the room while a record plays
  • Have a collection of 78 RPM records alongside modern vinyl
  • Are building a system around Denon gear
It is a harder sell if you already have a dedicated phono preamp and a receiver with its own phono stage and no interest in wireless audio. At that point you are paying for features you will never use, and there are turntables at this price that put more of the budget into pure analog performance.


Denon's History With Turntables

Denon was founded in 1910 and spent decades making professional broadcast and recording equipment before consumer products became their focus. Their turntable history dates back to the 1960s, when they manufactured broadcast-grade direct-drive tables for Japanese radio stations that had to perform flawlessly day after day. That background in precision engineering shapes how they approach every product they make, including the DP-500BT.

The DP-500BT actually draws some design inspiration from Denon's current flagship, the DP-3000NE, including its minimalist two-tone matte finish and S-shaped tonearm profile. Having that in common with a $2,500 reference table is not a bad starting point.

Build Quality & Design

The DP-500BT has a two-tone finish with a matte black plinth and brushed aluminum accents on the feet and tonearm hardware. It looks clean and modern without leaning into retro aesthetics, which means it fits as naturally into a contemporary living room as it does a more traditional one.

The build is solid. The platter is die-cast aluminum, which gives it the mass and rotational stability you want for consistent speed. The cast metal feet absorb vibrations from whatever surface the table is sitting on, which matters because a turntable stylus is extraordinarily sensitive and will pick up any vibration it encounters, not just what is in the record groove.

What is in the box:

  • Turntable and platter (packed separately)
  • Felt platter mat
  • Pre-installed moving-magnet cartridge
  • RCA cables with signal ground wire
  • AC power adapter with regional plug adapters
  • Removable dust cover with hinges
Denon DP-500BT Turntable on a shelf

Belt-Drive: Why It Matters at This Price

The DP-500BT uses a belt-drive system, meaning the motor is physically separated from the platter by a rubber belt. That separation keeps motor vibration out of the playback path in a way that direct-drive designs at this price struggle to match.

Direct-drive turntables have real advantages. They get up to speed almost instantly and let you manipulate the record by hand, which is why DJs love them. But for someone sitting down to listen to music, that motor sitting directly under the platter introduces noise that a belt-drive sidesteps.

There are some very strong direct-drive turntables out there, particularly at the higher end of the market where the motor technology is sophisticated enough to close that gap. At this price though, belt-drive is where we would point most listeners.

Another reason belt-drive tends to perform well is platter mass. Once a heavy platter gets up to speed it tends to hold that speed consistently without the constant micro-corrections that direct-drive motors make. Wow and flutter is the measurement used to quantify those speed inconsistencies, and the lower the number the better. Denon specs the DP-500BT at 0.1% WRMS, and the die-cast aluminum platter is doing real work to hit that number.

We have a full video on belt-drive versus direct-drive turntables if you want to go deeper on this topic.

Tonearm & Cartridge

The tonearm is a static-balanced S-shaped design, which helps keep the cartridge better aligned with the groove as the arm travels from the outer edge of the record to the inner grooves, reducing tracking error in the process. It is a well-proven approach that works well for a turntable at this level.

The tonearm uses a universal headshell that twists and locks in place. When you are ready to upgrade the cartridge, you simply twist off the headshell and drop in a new one. No tools, no complicated alignment process from scratch.

The included cartridge is a moving-magnet design with a spherical stylus, model DSN-85. A spherical tip is the most durable and easiest to set up, which makes it a smart choice for a table at this level. It will get you listening immediately and track your records safely. When you are ready to hear what this tonearm is actually capable of, dropping in a cartridge with an elliptical stylus will be a noticeable improvement in detail retrieval and groove tracing.

Close up of Denon DP-500BT Cartridge
Close up of Denon DP-500BT Tonearm

Setting Up the DP-500BT

Setup takes about fifteen minutes. Here is a quick overview of the process:

  1. Loop the drive belt around the motor roller using the included red ribbon, then set the platter onto the center spindle
  2. Place the felt mat on top with the Denon logo facing down
  3. Thread the counterweight onto the back of the tonearm and insert the headshell, locking it in place
  4. Set the anti-skate dial to zero, release the tonearm, and adjust the counterweight until the arm floats parallel to the platter
  5. Hold the counterweight still and rotate the inner tracking force ring to zero, then rotate the full counterweight clockwise until the number two lines up with the reference line
  6. Set the anti-skate dial to two
Every Audio Advice purchaser receives our full setup video, which walks through this process step by step. Our team is also available, if you have any questions.

Semi-Automatic Operation

The DP-500BT is semi-automatic. When the record ends, the tonearm lifts and the platter stops on its own. You still manually lower the tonearm onto the record to get things started, so the experience of playing a record is the same. It just saves you from having to be in the room when the side ends, which is a real convenience if you want to walk away or doze off on the couch without worrying about your stylus sitting in the run-out groove and wearing it down to the point where it needs replacing.

Speed Options: 33 1/3, 45, and 78 RPM

The DP-500BT supports all three speeds. The 78 RPM option does not get talked about much but it is a real differentiator at this price. A lot of turntables skip it entirely because it is a smaller market, but if you have older shellac records or you are into collecting early 20th century pressings, this turntable can play them.

78 RPM records are cut with a wider groove than modern vinyl and actually prefer a spherical stylus to track properly. The included spherical stylus works well for 78s, and if you want a dedicated 78 setup, you can keep a second headshell mounted with a 78 stylus and swap between them in seconds thanks to the universal headshell design.

Built-In Phono Preamp

The DP-500BT has a built-in switchable phono preamp. If you are connecting to powered speakers or an amp without a dedicated phono input, you need the preamp switched on. It handles the RIAA equalization and brings the cartridge's low-level signal up to something your other equipment can use.

If you are going into a receiver that already has a phono stage, or if you want to run a separate outboard preamp, you flip the switch and send the raw phono signal straight out the RCA outputs instead. The built-in stage sounds perfectly decent for casual listening and will not hold you back at this level. But that bypass switch means when you are ready to upgrade, something in the $200 to $400 range can make a real difference and the DP-500BT is already set up to accommodate it.

Denon DP-500BT Turntable

Bluetooth Streaming

The DP-500BT has built-in Bluetooth with aptX, aptX HD, and aptX Adaptive support. These are the higher-quality codecs that get you closer to CD quality over a wireless connection, assuming the device you are pairing with also supports them. Standard Bluetooth defaults to SBC, which compresses the signal aggressively. aptX HD is a meaningful step up, and aptX Adaptive goes further with variable bitrate up to 24-bit/96kHz on compatible hardware.

How to pair it:

  1. Plug the turntable in
  2. Press and hold the Bluetooth button until the indicator light flashes blue and red
  3. Put your device into pairing mode
  4. The DP-500BT connects automatically
  5. A solid blue light confirms the connection
There is a physical volume knob under the front edge of the platter for the Bluetooth output. The RCA and Bluetooth outputs also work simultaneously, so you do not have to choose one or the other or disconnect anything when switching between them.

It is worth understanding what happens when you use Bluetooth though. Vinyl is an analog format, and the moment you transmit wirelessly you are converting that analog signal to digital. If your goal is a pure analog signal path, cables will always give you a better result. Use Bluetooth when convenience is the priority and the RCA outputs when sound quality is.

Sound Quality

We dropped the needle on John Mellencamp's "Pink Houses" and what stood out immediately was how well the DP-500BT held the rhythm and pace of the track. The mass of the die-cast aluminum platter combined with the belt-drive system keeps speed stable in a way that really comes through on music with a strong rhythmic foundation. It just sounds like vinyl is supposed to sound. The built-in phono stage is transparent enough that it is not holding anything back at this level.

How It Compares: Denon DP-500BT vs. Pro-Ject Debut EVO 2

The Pro-Ject Debut EVO 2 comes in at $799 and is worth mentioning as a comparison point. It has a carbon fiber tonearm, no Bluetooth, and no built-in phono stage. It puts everything into the analog performance side of the equation. If pure analog performance is the only thing that matters to you and you already have a phono stage, it is worth a look.

The DP-500BT costs $100 more and makes a different bet. It covers more ground in terms of connectivity and convenience while still delivering strong analog performance. Which one makes more sense depends entirely on how you plan to use it.

Denon DP-500BT Turntable

Frequently Asked Questions

Does the Denon DP-500BT need a phono preamp? No. It has a built-in switchable phono preamp, so you can connect it directly to powered speakers or any amplifier without a dedicated phono input. If your receiver or amp already has a phono stage, or if you want to use a separate outboard preamp, you can bypass the built-in stage with the switch on the rear panel.

Can you use the Denon DP-500BT with Bluetooth headphones? Yes. The DP-500BT streams wirelessly via Bluetooth with aptX, aptX HD, and aptX Adaptive support. For the best wireless audio quality, pair it with headphones that support the same codecs. Keep in mind that using cables will always give you a better sounding result than Bluetooth.

What cartridge does the Denon DP-500BT come with? It comes with a moving-magnet cartridge with a DSN-85 spherical stylus, pre-installed in the headshell. The recommended tracking force for this cartridge is 2 grams.

Can you upgrade the cartridge on the Denon DP-500BT? Yes, and it is one of the easiest upgrades you can make on this table. The universal headshell twists off and locks back in place, so swapping in a new cartridge requires no tools and no complicated setup process.

Does the Denon DP-500BT play 78 RPM records? Yes. It supports 33 1/3, 45, and 78 RPM. The included spherical stylus actually works well for 78s. If you want a dedicated 78 setup, you can keep a second headshell with a 78 stylus and swap between them in seconds.

Can you use Bluetooth and RCA outputs at the same time? Yes. The Bluetooth and RCA outputs on the DP-500BT work simultaneously, so you do not have to choose between them or disconnect anything when switching.

Audio Advice Take

The Denon DP-500BT is a well-built turntable that covers a lot of ground for $899. The belt-drive system and die-cast aluminum platter deliver stable, clean playback. The semi-automatic operation protects your records and your stylus. The switchable phono preamp and universal headshell give you a clear upgrade path as your interest in vinyl grows. And the Bluetooth implementation is more capable than most at this price.


We’re Here to Help!

If you have further questions, contact our experts via chat, phone, or email. Or simply visit one of our world-class showrooms to experience speakers, projectors, TVs, and everything in between for yourself before you make a purchase!

If you’re planning your home theater or media room, check out our Home Theater Design page, where we have everything Home Theater related, including our FREE Home Theater Design Tool.

When you buy from Audio Advice, you’re buying from a trusted seller since 1978. We offer Free Shipping, Lifetime Expert Support, and our Price Guarantee. We look forward to serving you!

Denon DP-500BT Premium Belt-Drive Hi-Fi Turntable with Bluetooth - Image 2

Details & Craftsmanship

Every detail has been carefully considered to bring you the perfect product.

Denon DP-500BT Premium Belt-Drive Hi-Fi Turntable with Bluetooth - Image 3

Details & Craftsmanship

Every detail has been carefully considered to bring you the perfect product.

Denon DP-500BT Premium Belt-Drive Hi-Fi Turntable with Bluetooth - Image 4

Details & Craftsmanship

Every detail has been carefully considered to bring you the perfect product.

Denon DP-500BT Premium Belt-Drive Hi-Fi Turntable with Bluetooth - Image 5

Details & Craftsmanship

Every detail has been carefully considered to bring you the perfect product.

Denon DP-500BT Premium Belt-Drive Hi-Fi Turntable with Bluetooth - Image 6

Details & Craftsmanship

Every detail has been carefully considered to bring you the perfect product.

Denon DP-500BT Premium Belt-Drive Hi-Fi Turntable with Bluetooth - Image 7

Details & Craftsmanship

Every detail has been carefully considered to bring you the perfect product.

Denon DP-500BT Premium Belt-Drive Hi-Fi Turntable with Bluetooth - Image 8

Details & Craftsmanship

Every detail has been carefully considered to bring you the perfect product.

Denon DP-500BT Premium Belt-Drive Hi-Fi Turntable with Bluetooth - Image 9

Details & Craftsmanship

Every detail has been carefully considered to bring you the perfect product.

Denon DP-500BT Premium Belt-Drive Hi-Fi Turntable with Bluetooth - Image 10

Details & Craftsmanship

Every detail has been carefully considered to bring you the perfect product.

Denon DP-500BT Premium Belt-Drive Hi-Fi Turntable with Bluetooth - Image 11

Details & Craftsmanship

Every detail has been carefully considered to bring you the perfect product.

Denon DP-500BT Premium Belt-Drive Hi-Fi Turntable with Bluetooth - Image 12

Details & Craftsmanship

Every detail has been carefully considered to bring you the perfect product.

Description

A Belt-Drive Turntable Built for Modern Listening

The Denon DP-500BT is a $899 belt-drive turntable with a built-in phono preamp, Bluetooth streaming, and semi-automatic operation. It is available now.

If you want to see it in action before reading, we have a full video review linked above.

Denon DP-500BT Turntable

Who Is the Denon DP-500BT For?

The DP-500BT is built for the listener who wants a capable, easy-to-use turntable that works with a wide range of setups. It is a strong fit if you:

  • Are getting serious about vinyl and want a table that will grow with you
  • Need Bluetooth for headphone listening or a wireless speaker setup
  • Want semi-automatic operation so you are not tethered to the room while a record plays
  • Have a collection of 78 RPM records alongside modern vinyl
  • Are building a system around Denon gear
It is a harder sell if you already have a dedicated phono preamp and a receiver with its own phono stage and no interest in wireless audio. At that point you are paying for features you will never use, and there are turntables at this price that put more of the budget into pure analog performance.


Denon's History With Turntables

Denon was founded in 1910 and spent decades making professional broadcast and recording equipment before consumer products became their focus. Their turntable history dates back to the 1960s, when they manufactured broadcast-grade direct-drive tables for Japanese radio stations that had to perform flawlessly day after day. That background in precision engineering shapes how they approach every product they make, including the DP-500BT.

The DP-500BT actually draws some design inspiration from Denon's current flagship, the DP-3000NE, including its minimalist two-tone matte finish and S-shaped tonearm profile. Having that in common with a $2,500 reference table is not a bad starting point.

Build Quality & Design

The DP-500BT has a two-tone finish with a matte black plinth and brushed aluminum accents on the feet and tonearm hardware. It looks clean and modern without leaning into retro aesthetics, which means it fits as naturally into a contemporary living room as it does a more traditional one.

The build is solid. The platter is die-cast aluminum, which gives it the mass and rotational stability you want for consistent speed. The cast metal feet absorb vibrations from whatever surface the table is sitting on, which matters because a turntable stylus is extraordinarily sensitive and will pick up any vibration it encounters, not just what is in the record groove.

What is in the box:

  • Turntable and platter (packed separately)
  • Felt platter mat
  • Pre-installed moving-magnet cartridge
  • RCA cables with signal ground wire
  • AC power adapter with regional plug adapters
  • Removable dust cover with hinges
Denon DP-500BT Turntable on a shelf

Belt-Drive: Why It Matters at This Price

The DP-500BT uses a belt-drive system, meaning the motor is physically separated from the platter by a rubber belt. That separation keeps motor vibration out of the playback path in a way that direct-drive designs at this price struggle to match.

Direct-drive turntables have real advantages. They get up to speed almost instantly and let you manipulate the record by hand, which is why DJs love them. But for someone sitting down to listen to music, that motor sitting directly under the platter introduces noise that a belt-drive sidesteps.

There are some very strong direct-drive turntables out there, particularly at the higher end of the market where the motor technology is sophisticated enough to close that gap. At this price though, belt-drive is where we would point most listeners.

Another reason belt-drive tends to perform well is platter mass. Once a heavy platter gets up to speed it tends to hold that speed consistently without the constant micro-corrections that direct-drive motors make. Wow and flutter is the measurement used to quantify those speed inconsistencies, and the lower the number the better. Denon specs the DP-500BT at 0.1% WRMS, and the die-cast aluminum platter is doing real work to hit that number.

We have a full video on belt-drive versus direct-drive turntables if you want to go deeper on this topic.

Tonearm & Cartridge

The tonearm is a static-balanced S-shaped design, which helps keep the cartridge better aligned with the groove as the arm travels from the outer edge of the record to the inner grooves, reducing tracking error in the process. It is a well-proven approach that works well for a turntable at this level.

The tonearm uses a universal headshell that twists and locks in place. When you are ready to upgrade the cartridge, you simply twist off the headshell and drop in a new one. No tools, no complicated alignment process from scratch.

The included cartridge is a moving-magnet design with a spherical stylus, model DSN-85. A spherical tip is the most durable and easiest to set up, which makes it a smart choice for a table at this level. It will get you listening immediately and track your records safely. When you are ready to hear what this tonearm is actually capable of, dropping in a cartridge with an elliptical stylus will be a noticeable improvement in detail retrieval and groove tracing.

Close up of Denon DP-500BT Cartridge
Close up of Denon DP-500BT Tonearm

Setting Up the DP-500BT

Setup takes about fifteen minutes. Here is a quick overview of the process:

  1. Loop the drive belt around the motor roller using the included red ribbon, then set the platter onto the center spindle
  2. Place the felt mat on top with the Denon logo facing down
  3. Thread the counterweight onto the back of the tonearm and insert the headshell, locking it in place
  4. Set the anti-skate dial to zero, release the tonearm, and adjust the counterweight until the arm floats parallel to the platter
  5. Hold the counterweight still and rotate the inner tracking force ring to zero, then rotate the full counterweight clockwise until the number two lines up with the reference line
  6. Set the anti-skate dial to two
Every Audio Advice purchaser receives our full setup video, which walks through this process step by step. Our team is also available, if you have any questions.

Semi-Automatic Operation

The DP-500BT is semi-automatic. When the record ends, the tonearm lifts and the platter stops on its own. You still manually lower the tonearm onto the record to get things started, so the experience of playing a record is the same. It just saves you from having to be in the room when the side ends, which is a real convenience if you want to walk away or doze off on the couch without worrying about your stylus sitting in the run-out groove and wearing it down to the point where it needs replacing.

Speed Options: 33 1/3, 45, and 78 RPM

The DP-500BT supports all three speeds. The 78 RPM option does not get talked about much but it is a real differentiator at this price. A lot of turntables skip it entirely because it is a smaller market, but if you have older shellac records or you are into collecting early 20th century pressings, this turntable can play them.

78 RPM records are cut with a wider groove than modern vinyl and actually prefer a spherical stylus to track properly. The included spherical stylus works well for 78s, and if you want a dedicated 78 setup, you can keep a second headshell mounted with a 78 stylus and swap between them in seconds thanks to the universal headshell design.

Built-In Phono Preamp

The DP-500BT has a built-in switchable phono preamp. If you are connecting to powered speakers or an amp without a dedicated phono input, you need the preamp switched on. It handles the RIAA equalization and brings the cartridge's low-level signal up to something your other equipment can use.

If you are going into a receiver that already has a phono stage, or if you want to run a separate outboard preamp, you flip the switch and send the raw phono signal straight out the RCA outputs instead. The built-in stage sounds perfectly decent for casual listening and will not hold you back at this level. But that bypass switch means when you are ready to upgrade, something in the $200 to $400 range can make a real difference and the DP-500BT is already set up to accommodate it.

Denon DP-500BT Turntable

Bluetooth Streaming

The DP-500BT has built-in Bluetooth with aptX, aptX HD, and aptX Adaptive support. These are the higher-quality codecs that get you closer to CD quality over a wireless connection, assuming the device you are pairing with also supports them. Standard Bluetooth defaults to SBC, which compresses the signal aggressively. aptX HD is a meaningful step up, and aptX Adaptive goes further with variable bitrate up to 24-bit/96kHz on compatible hardware.

How to pair it:

  1. Plug the turntable in
  2. Press and hold the Bluetooth button until the indicator light flashes blue and red
  3. Put your device into pairing mode
  4. The DP-500BT connects automatically
  5. A solid blue light confirms the connection
There is a physical volume knob under the front edge of the platter for the Bluetooth output. The RCA and Bluetooth outputs also work simultaneously, so you do not have to choose one or the other or disconnect anything when switching between them.

It is worth understanding what happens when you use Bluetooth though. Vinyl is an analog format, and the moment you transmit wirelessly you are converting that analog signal to digital. If your goal is a pure analog signal path, cables will always give you a better result. Use Bluetooth when convenience is the priority and the RCA outputs when sound quality is.

Sound Quality

We dropped the needle on John Mellencamp's "Pink Houses" and what stood out immediately was how well the DP-500BT held the rhythm and pace of the track. The mass of the die-cast aluminum platter combined with the belt-drive system keeps speed stable in a way that really comes through on music with a strong rhythmic foundation. It just sounds like vinyl is supposed to sound. The built-in phono stage is transparent enough that it is not holding anything back at this level.

How It Compares: Denon DP-500BT vs. Pro-Ject Debut EVO 2

The Pro-Ject Debut EVO 2 comes in at $799 and is worth mentioning as a comparison point. It has a carbon fiber tonearm, no Bluetooth, and no built-in phono stage. It puts everything into the analog performance side of the equation. If pure analog performance is the only thing that matters to you and you already have a phono stage, it is worth a look.

The DP-500BT costs $100 more and makes a different bet. It covers more ground in terms of connectivity and convenience while still delivering strong analog performance. Which one makes more sense depends entirely on how you plan to use it.

Denon DP-500BT Turntable

Frequently Asked Questions

Does the Denon DP-500BT need a phono preamp? No. It has a built-in switchable phono preamp, so you can connect it directly to powered speakers or any amplifier without a dedicated phono input. If your receiver or amp already has a phono stage, or if you want to use a separate outboard preamp, you can bypass the built-in stage with the switch on the rear panel.

Can you use the Denon DP-500BT with Bluetooth headphones? Yes. The DP-500BT streams wirelessly via Bluetooth with aptX, aptX HD, and aptX Adaptive support. For the best wireless audio quality, pair it with headphones that support the same codecs. Keep in mind that using cables will always give you a better sounding result than Bluetooth.

What cartridge does the Denon DP-500BT come with? It comes with a moving-magnet cartridge with a DSN-85 spherical stylus, pre-installed in the headshell. The recommended tracking force for this cartridge is 2 grams.

Can you upgrade the cartridge on the Denon DP-500BT? Yes, and it is one of the easiest upgrades you can make on this table. The universal headshell twists off and locks back in place, so swapping in a new cartridge requires no tools and no complicated setup process.

Does the Denon DP-500BT play 78 RPM records? Yes. It supports 33 1/3, 45, and 78 RPM. The included spherical stylus actually works well for 78s. If you want a dedicated 78 setup, you can keep a second headshell with a 78 stylus and swap between them in seconds.

Can you use Bluetooth and RCA outputs at the same time? Yes. The Bluetooth and RCA outputs on the DP-500BT work simultaneously, so you do not have to choose between them or disconnect anything when switching.

Audio Advice Take

The Denon DP-500BT is a well-built turntable that covers a lot of ground for $899. The belt-drive system and die-cast aluminum platter deliver stable, clean playback. The semi-automatic operation protects your records and your stylus. The switchable phono preamp and universal headshell give you a clear upgrade path as your interest in vinyl grows. And the Bluetooth implementation is more capable than most at this price.


We’re Here to Help!

If you have further questions, contact our experts via chat, phone, or email. Or simply visit one of our world-class showrooms to experience speakers, projectors, TVs, and everything in between for yourself before you make a purchase!

If you’re planning your home theater or media room, check out our Home Theater Design page, where we have everything Home Theater related, including our FREE Home Theater Design Tool.

When you buy from Audio Advice, you’re buying from a trusted seller since 1978. We offer Free Shipping, Lifetime Expert Support, and our Price Guarantee. We look forward to serving you!

Denon DP-500BT Premium Belt-Drive Hi-Fi Turntable with Bluetooth | Audio Advice