Techivation has released Tilt EQ, a free linear phase tilt equalizer for macOS and Windows.
Before we check out the plugin, a quick look at the download process. To get this into your DAW, you’ll need to create a free Techivation account (email and password), which also unlocks the rest of the developer’s freebies in one place.
The good news is that Techivation offers a couple of other excellent freebies: the T-De-Esser 2 (one of the best free de-essers, for sure) and the T-Saturator. Those are definitely worth the download, too.
Now, the core idea behind Tilt EQ is simple. You push the Tilt Gain up to brighten the sound or pull it down to darken it, and the plugin tilts the whole spectrum around a center point.
However, this tilt EQ has a twist – the Drive control. Most tilt EQs just discard the energy they cut. Tilt EQ takes that energy and re-injects it as harmonic saturation on the side of the spectrum being reduced, so your tilt moves add musical color instead of leaving the sound thin.
Drive intensity scales with how much the tilt curve cuts, so the saturation responds to whatever the EQ is doing. I like this a lot, and I already tested it on a sound design project today with excellent results.
The control I find most useful here, though, and one I haven’t seen in other free tilt EQs, is the Tilt Band Range. It sets the frequency range where the transition between boost and cut happens, so you can define exactly where the tilt occurs and how sharp or gradual the slope is.
Of course, wider ranges give you gentle shifts, and narrower ranges give you more targeted tonal moves. Wider sounds more natural, generally speaking.

Also, Tilt EQ has LR and M/S modes, a stereo balance control for panning the band effect across L/R or M/S channels, and a pair of variable-slope low-cut and high-cut filters for cleaning up rumble and harsh top end.
There’s also automatic gain compensation (nice!), and the Drive section can run at up to 8x oversampling (Standard, Good, Great, or Ultra) for saturation without aliasing.
Another nice touch is that the interface includes a built-in spectrum analyzer with input/output modes, and a red overlay that shows the Drive harmonics on top of the spectrum.
I don’t use tilt EQs much in music production, but they’re great for sound design when you want to quickly brighten or darken a sound without reaching for a full parametric EQ.
This one performed really well during my quick test. Techivation’s plugins have historically been stable and lightweight in my DAW, and this one feels the same.
Tilt EQ is available in VST, VST3, AU, and AAX formats for macOS 10.11 and higher (Intel and Apple Silicon) and Windows 7 and up.
Download: Techivation Tilt EQ (FREE)
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Last Updated on April 27, 2026 by Tomislav Zlatic.





