

Magico’s S Series has long been the company’s “real-world” reference line, still expensive and engineering-heavy, but positioned below its flagship M Series. Now the lineup gets a new top model: the Magico S7 2026, a five-driver, three-way, sealed (acoustic suspension) floorstanding loudspeaker that also happens to be, frankly, enormous.
Each speaker weighs 174 kg (384 lb), stands about 1.42 m (4 ft 6 in) tall, and is designed to be the final, most technically ambitious statement in the updated S Series family that recently added the S3 (2023), S5, and S2.
One of the headline engineering changes is size. Magico says the S7 2026 increases internal cabinet volume from 135 liters to 180 liters compared with the previous S Series flagship. The company’s claim: that added volume extends bass response by about 5 Hz while keeping sensitivity the same. On paper, the S7 2026 is rated at 20 Hz–50 kHz, with 88 dB sensitivity and a 4-ohm nominal load, numbers that hint at full-range ambitions but also suggest you’ll want an amplifier that’s comfortable with current delivery.

Magico lists a recommended power range of 50W to 1000W into 4 ohms. That’s a wide window, but the takeaway is simple: these speakers aren’t meant to be paired with underpowered electronics.
Magico leans heavily on measurement and simulation, and the S7 2026 follows the same playbook. The company says it used a Near-Field Scanner (NFS) system to map the speaker’s full 3D acoustic output, capturing both on-axis and off-axis behavior. That matters because dispersion, how sound spreads into the room, often determines whether a speaker sounds “right” beyond a single sweet spot. Magico frames this as part of a technology trickle-down from its M Series development process.
On the mechanical side, Magico also says it used laser vibrometry during R&D to identify and reduce cabinet vibrations, essentially hunting for tiny resonances that could add coloration.

The driver array is a big part of the S7 2026 story:
A practical detail: those three woofers are vertically aligned, a layout Magico says helps reduce floor-bounce effects (a common in-room issue that can create dips or peaks in the bass and lower midrange depending on placement and listening height). In other words, this isn’t only about lab measurements—it’s also aimed at smoothing out what you actually hear in a living room.

The S7 2026 uses Magico’s Elliptical Symmetry Crossover (ESXO) with 24 dB Linkwitz-Riley acoustic slopes. Magico says the goal is to maintain phase and frequency linearity while reducing intermodulation distortion. Component-wise, it includes parts from Mundorf, and notably brings Duelund CAST PP capacitors into an S Series model for the first time.
Technical Specifications:

Magico will offer 12 finishes total: six Softec powder coat options and six High Gloss automotive-style options. In the UK, pricing is listed at £159,000 per pair (Softec) or £178,000 per pair (High Gloss, incl. VAT). Shipping is scheduled for Q3 2026, with additional regional pricing expected later.
Given the 174 kg weight per speaker, this is also a product where delivery, placement, and setup aren’t afterthoughts, as you’ll likely be planning the room around them, not the other way around.
The Magico S7 2026 looks like a “final form” S Series speaker, bigger cabinet volume, a five-driver sealed layout, and a clear technology bridge from Magico’s flagship work, built to chase full-range performance without relying on ports or external bass reinforcement.
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