Best Budget Hotswap Keyboards Under $100 (Tested for Sound)
You don't need to spend $300 to get a thocky board. What to look for in a sub-$100 hotswap keyboard — and the features that actually matter for sound.
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The hobby has a reputation for $300 group buys, but the truth in 2026 is that sub-$100 hotswap boards sound genuinely good — often with foam and even a gasket mount included. Here's how to buy one that punches above its price.
Why hotswap, always
A hotswap PCB lets you pull and replace switches with zero soldering. For a beginner (or anyone), it means you can change switches whenever your taste changes — which it will. Never buy a soldered board as your first keyboard.
What actually matters under $100
- Included foam / gasket mount. Many budget boards now ship with case foam, plate foam, and even PE foam. That's most of the "thock" work done for you.
- Thick PBT keycaps in the box (or plan to add them). Thin ABS caps are the fastest way to make any board sound cheap.
- A layout you'll actually use. 65% and 75% hit the sweet spot: compact but keep arrow keys. 60% is smaller but drops arrows; TKL/full-size if you need a numpad.
- South-facing sockets if you ever want Cherry-profile keycaps without interference (a nice-to-have, not a dealbreaker).
- Wired vs wireless. Wireless (Bluetooth/2.4GHz) is common now even on budget boards; wired-only is fine and cheaper.
What you can ignore at this price
- Fancy screens and knobs are fun but don't change how it types or sounds.
- Aluminum cases look premium but can ring more than a well-foamed plastic case; don't overpay for metal alone.
The smart budget build
- Buy a 65%/75% hotswap board with foam in the $50–90 range.
- Drop in a switch sampler, pick your favorite, fill the board.
- Add thick PBT keycaps if it didn't come with them.
- Lube the stabs, maybe the switches. Done — a board that sounds like it cost triple.
Spend the savings on switches and caps, not on a name. Sound comes from the build, not the price tag.