AlphaTheta is rolling out the XDJ-AN, a 2-channel all-in-one system priced at $1,200 (preorder units available in the DJTT store). It aims to be the “bridge” between home controllers like a DDJ-FLX4 to a club-style booth without spending CDJ money. The XDJ-AN also still withholds enough features that some DJs will skip right by the release. The XDJ-RR is a deliberate reference point: it’s the last time AlphaTheta (then still Pioneer DJ) made a 2-channel all-in-one at this size and price. It’s since been discontinued (even we are down toour last unit in stock in the DJTT store)
XDJ-AN vs XDJ-RR

The dimensional numbers line up between these units almost exactly. The XDJ-RR weighed 5.2kg at 625 x 388.5 x 74.2mm. The XDJ-AN weighs the same 5.2kg, at 638 x 359.2 x 89.9mm (in other words, narrower and shallower, but a bit taller). A decade of touchscreen, Wi-Fi, and wireless monitoring hardware, and AlphaTheta didn’t add a gram to the device. Price moved less than $75 in raw dollars, $1,129 to $1,200, which means anyone accounting for a decade of inflation will read the new unit as the actual bargain – assuming they feel fine with the feature set.
You can tell the biggest difference: physical controls. AlphaTheta seems really keen to reduce component costs (electronics are expensive after all) and instead are relying on the workhorse of the screen. No sync buttons, no performance pad modes, no track search buttons, no loop buttons (but the lovely loop encoder returns), no jog mode buttons. This is truly one of the first standalone devices from this company – outside of the Opus Quad / Omnis Duo – to dramatically remove some of the staples of the classic Pioneer DJ hardware layout.

What the RR never had is the part AlphaTheta is selling strongly here: streaming and cloud access built into the box. The XDJ-AN streams straight from Apple Music, Beatport Streaming, and Tidal (Spotify is coming in a later update, according to our contact at AlphaTheta), pulls from a synced rekordbox cloud library, and runs rekordbox or djay’s mobile apps over USB-C. That means a mobile-centric DJ could perform from just a phone – something that controller DJs who use Rekordbox have been able to do since the DDJ-200’s release in ~2019.
Wait, USB-C Only?
Yup. You can stream, but if you want to bring your own flash drive to the XDJ-AN, you’ll want a drive with a USB-C connector. There’s only one USB-C port on the back of the device designed for drives. We strongly recommend our own Chroma USB Drive – which is about to have a major aesthetic refresh with new exterior design and colors. Shh!

XDJ-AN compared to the flagship all-in-one, XDJ-AZ
Here’s where the $1,200 price actually comes from when measured against the $3,449 XDJ-AZ (ie, what’s missing):
- Streaming and cloud sync lean entirely on venue Wi-Fi, with no wired LAN port to fall back on. Club Wi-Fi is famously unreliable, and unlike the AZ, there’s no Ethernet connection to route around it.
- Only one USB drive slot. This is a big yikes for DJs who want to use a XDJ-AN to play back to back with someone. It does feel a little odd that the other USB-C port couldn’t be used for a drive as well, but the device is marked just for phones and computers…

- No booth output. Just XLR and RCA master outs plus a headphone jack. The AZ gives booth techs an independent 1/4″ booth level; the AN doesn’t.
- No line or phono input. Nothing plugs in here beyond USB, mobile, or the streaming and cloud paths. The AZ has RCA line/phono inputs for an external turntable or other analog source.
- Three Beat FX: Reverb, Echo, and Flanger. The same basic set the XDJ-RR shipped a decade ago, well short of the AZ’s fourteen.
- Smaller jog wheels and a shorter tempo fader throw than the CDJ-style decks on the AZ and CDJ-3000X. Workable for beatmatched sets, less forgiving for anyone leaning on scratch technique.
- One mic input on a 1/4″ TRS jack, no independent EQ. The AZ has two combo XLR/TRS inputs, each with its own 3-band EQ.
For context on where $1,200 lands: AlphaTheta’s other current 2-channel and 4-channel all-in-ones are:
The XDJ-AN sits well under all three, in the gap the RR used to fill before it got pushed out in favor of the pricier lineup.
Wherefore art thou, XDJ-AX?
That gap is basically where the XDJ-RX3 already sits today at $2,269, still the more “professional” 2-channel option in the range. But it’s still on hardware that predates streaming, cloud sync, and SonicLink entirely. If AlphaTheta runs the same refresh it just ran on the CDJ-3000X, a modernized 2-channel unit in that same slot (call it an XDJ-AX) really feels like the next move.
We’ll be carrying the XDJ-AN in the DJTT store – support us and grab a preorder unit there!












