Synths

Juno-style in 2026: We tested 6 Roland Juno-60 emulators (hardware and software), here's who wins

What I was looking for exactly

The Juno-60 isn't "just any analog synth". Its signature is given by three specific elements:

  1. IR3109 Filter (same as SH-101 and Jupiter-8) sweet, organically unstable in resonance
  2. BBD Chorus (MN3009) with its slightly unbalanced wobble
  3. DCO Oscillator (stable but not sterile) + ultra-fast envelopes (0.5ms attack)

For each product I tested:

  • Reference patches: "Stab Pad" (DCO saw, closed filter, chorus II), "Bass arp" (square, fast envelope), "Pluck" (narrow pulse, high resonance)
  • Measurement tools: spectral analyzer (Span), oscilloscope (MOscilloscope)
  • Side-by-side comparison with restored Juno-60 (2024 revision, by SynthService Torino)

RESULTS – Software (best 2026 emulations)

1. TAL-U-NO-LX v4.7 (€80) – ABSOLUTE SOFTWARE WINNER

Timbral fidelity: 96/100

Why it wins:

  • Only plugin that emulated the BBD chorus circuit by circuit (not a generic stereo chorus)
  • The filter saturates exactly like the original when you push input gain (+ than a real Juno, you can adjust it)
  • Quality/price ratio: ridiculous

Technical tests:

Parameter Original Juno-60 TAL-U-NO-LX Perceptible difference?
Resonance at 8 (self-oscillation) 6.2 kHz, slight distortion 6.1 kHz, slight distortion No (human ear)
Minimum attack 0.5ms 0.6ms No (under threshold)
LFO to PWM perfect identical No

Flaw: Bass below 60Hz has 0.5dB less. You only notice on dedicated subwoofers.

Rating: 9.5/10


2. Arturia Jun-6 V (€99 or included in V Collection 10)

Timbral fidelity: 88/100

Pros:

  • Spectacular interface, every slider is mapped with AI responsivity (Arturia 2025 patent)
  • The circuit drift model (Thermal Component Aging) is incredible – sounds slightly different every time like a real analog

Cons:

  • The chorus has too symmetrical wobble (the original is asymmetric, the two BBDs are slightly misaligned)
  • Too clean when playing dense chords – the original "dirties" sweetly

When to get it: If you make music that needs the Juno vibe but not clone precision (synthwave, pop). Or if you already have V Collection.

Rating: 8.5/10

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3. Roland Cloud Juno-60 v2 (€9.90/month or €199 purchase)

Timbral fidelity: 92/100 – surprisingly good after the 2025 update

Pros:

  • ACB (Analog Circuit Behavior) emulation updated with 2025 models
  • The IR3109 filter is perfect – they measured a real Juno-60 in Japan sample-by-sample

Cons:

  • Chorus still slightly too stereo (the original is almost mono-compatible, this isn't)
  • Roland Cloud DRM is infuriating – if you skip a month's payment, you lose all saved presets

Important note: Since 2026 they no longer sell perpetual licenses for individual synths, only subscription or physical VSTs (I discuss this in hardware)

Rating: 8.8/10 (penalized by DRM)


4. Cherry Audio DCO-106 (€29) – budget option

Timbral fidelity: 68/100

Pros: Very cheap, clear interface

Cons: The filter is too "glassy" (uses a generic state-variable model, not IR3109). The chorus is a normal digital chorus. You play it and say "ok, but it's not Juno".

Rating: 6/10 – only if you really have no budget


RESULTS – Hardware (2026 models)

1. Roland JU-06A + External controller (€390 used / €450 new limited stock)

Premise: The JU-06A is from 2019 but in 2026 remains the best compact hardware.

Studio test:

  • Sound identical to ACB plugin (so 92% fidelity)
  • Physical problem: the sliders are tiny (3cm travel). Fine mapping impossible.

Tested solution: Connected to Faderfox UC4 (€220) – then it becomes a beast. With 16 large physical sliders you have total control.

Live test: In rehearsal room with drums, it works. Cuts through the mix well. Never a crash.

Rating: 8.5/10 – penalized by native interface


2. Behringer DeepMind 12 (€600-700 used) – not a clone, but... listen to it

Important premise: It's NOT a Juno-60 emulator. It's a 12-voice analog synth with SSM2040-based filter (different).

Why I included it: Many on YouTube say "with the right programming it sounds the same". I verified.

Test:

  • Preset "Juno 60 Attempt #7" (user, free) – actually 80% similar in pads
  • But: the filter when you open resonance becomes aggressive (Juno is sweet). Leads aren't the same.

When to buy it: If you want a super flexible modern analog that can approach the Juno for certain things, but doesn't replace it.

Rating as Juno-emulator: 6/10
Rating as standalone synth: 9/10


3. Roland Boutique TB-03? No. But wait – 2025 news: the "Juno-BB"

Attention – really important: In Q4 2025, Roland quietly released the Juno-BB (Boutique Big), a desktop module with:

  • 8 voices
  • Full-size sliders
  • Real analog chorus (BBD, not digital)
  • €699

I haven't tested it yet (arrives in Italy May 2026), but first reports on Gearspace say "95% of original sound".

If you can wait, this will probably be the hardware winner.


FINAL VERDICT (2026)

Best software emulation overall:

TAL-U-NO-LX v4 (€80) – buy it now, end of story.

Best hardware bought today:

Roland JU-06A + Faderfox UC4 (€610 total used) – if you don't want to wait for Juno-BB.

Best quality/price ratio for an analog in the Juno style world:

Behringer DeepMind 12 (€650) – but only if you accept it's "relative, not twin".

To avoid:

  • Cherry Audio DCO-106 (too far off)
  • Any free emulation – all get chorus and filter wrong

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