Senso Systems
Primare has taken its time getting to the one-box market, and that’s very much the point. The Swedish brand is known for products built around long-term ownership rather than chasing a trend, and the Allt-i-Ett, which translates simply as “all-in-one”, is its answer to a category that Naim, Cambridge Audio and Ruark have already made real money in.
It first showed up at The UK HiFi Show Live at Ascot in September 2025 ahead of its November release, and reviewers have had proper time with it since.
Ten drive units live inside a single rectangular cabinet: six 4-inch bass drivers, two 4-inch midrange drivers and two 0.75-inch dome tweeters. The bass array splits into two front-firing, two rear-firing and two down-firing drivers per channel, all sharing a single tuned chamber per side. The midrange units get their own isolated chambers with non-parallel walls to cut internal reflections, and the tweeters sit behind a waveguide designed to line up their dispersion with the midrange, backed by a cardioid rear chamber to control back-wave energy.
Power comes from a 300W peak, four-amplifier Class D system split two ways per channel, one pair driving midrange and tweeter, the other driving the woofer array. Development leaned on Klippel NFS 3D analysis, and the DSP handles placement tailoring for freestanding, wall or corner positioning, an 11-band EQ, automatic room correction and Bacch spatial processing to widen the soundstage beyond what the cabinet size suggests.
Primare’s own Prisma platform handles the streaming side: AirPlay 2, Spotify, Tidal Connect, Qobuz Connect, FM and DAB+ radio, plus Bluetooth with SBC, AAC, AptX and AptX HD codec support. Wired connections cover HDMI eARC, two optical and one coaxial digital input, USB-A, and a stereo RCA input that doubles as a moving-magnet phono stage if you want to run a turntable through it. There’s a dedicated subwoofer output too if you want more low end than the six woofers already give you, and headphone connectivity both wired via 3.5mm and wireless over Bluetooth.
“Most all-in-ones make you choose what to plug in. The Allt-i-Ett just gets on with all of it.”
Senso Team
A touchscreen sits on the top panel alongside a large illuminated rotary dial, and there’s a motorised display that raises to just under 90 degrees or lies flat depending on how you’re using it. It’s designed to be tilted electronically through the app or touchscreen rather than by hand, worth knowing if there are kids in the house. The Prisma app handles streaming setup, EQ, placement correction and general settings, and a standard remote is included for when the phone isn’t to hand.
The Allt-i-Ett comes in a blackwood finish that shows off the wood grain rather than hiding it, with a front speaker grille that sits proud of the main cabinet rather than flush, in keeping with Primare’s usual design language.
UK pricing is £2,700, available since November 2025.
All-in-one music system with built-in streaming, amplification and loudspeakers.
Pros
Cons
Primare hasn’t rushed the Allt-i-Ett to market, and it shows: ten drivers, Klippel-informed DSP and Prisma streaming in a single cabinet is a serious engineering effort, not a lifestyle speaker with a marketing budget behind it.
We’ve had it in the studio, and it’s an impressive bit of kit. Connection is seamless, everything just finds it and stays linked without any fiddling, and the musical range on offer is properly impressive for an all-in-one, there’s a lot more depth and scale here than the cabinet size lets on. Independent reviewers have said much the same, one described using it as their main living room system despite already owning a dedicated separates setup, which says plenty. On paper and in the room, it’s a strong option for anyone who wants proper sound without a rack of separates to manage.