Bose Sport Open Earbuds Truly Wireless Review (2024)

Type Earbuds

Enclosure Open-Back

Wireless Truly Wireless

Transducer Dynamic

Noise Cancelling No

Mic Yes

The Bose Sport Open Earbuds are open-ear headphones designed for outdoor sports. They have a stable fit and sit outside of your ears soyou can still hear ambient sound around you while running outdoors. However, this design makes them less versatile than other sports-oriented headphones like the Bose Sport Earbuds Truly Wireless. They can't block out any background noise and they leak a lot of audio. They also lack a lot of bass and don't have any customization features. While their 9.5-hour battery life should be enough to last through a commute, their carrying case doesn't offer any additional charges.

Our Verdict

5.5 Neutral Sound

The Bose Sport Open Earbuds are mediocre for neutral sound. While they have a flat and balanced mid-range, they lack a lot of low-bass. Unfortunately, they don't have any sound enhancement features to help tweak their sound to your liking. Their design doesn't really produce a wide or natural soundstage, either. That said, they can reproduce bass and treble consistently.

Pros

  • Consistent audio reproduction.

Cons

  • Lacking bass.

See our Neutral Sound Recommendations

5.9 Commute/Travel

The Bose Open Earbuds are sub-par for commute and travel. While they're portable, they won't isolate you from any of the rumble of bus engines or ambient chatter, and they also leak a lot of audio. Even though they're comfortable, you won't be able to wear them while also wearing glasses or a mask. On the upside, their 9.5-hour battery life should last through a long commute.

Pros

  • Great build quality and IPX4 rating for water resistance.

Cons

  • No noise isolation.

  • Leaks a lot of audio.

See our Commute/Travel Recommendations

8.2 Sports/Fitness

The Bose Sport Open Earbuds are great for sports and fitness. They have an open-ear fit so you can hear ambient noise around you while running or working out outdoors. They also have a stable fit, although they can put some pressure behind your ears and their design isn't the most malleable. They also have an IPX4 rating for water resistance, although we don't currently test this.

Pros

  • Great build quality and IPX4 rating for water resistance.

  • Open-ear fit is good for running outside.

Cons

  • Lacking bass.

See our Sports/Fitness Recommendations

5.6 Office

The Bose Sport Open Earbuds are disappointing for office use. They don't isolate noise by design, so you hear everything that goes on in the office, and they leak a lot of audio. They're decently comfortable but unfortunately, you won't be able to wear them while also wearing glasses or a mask. On the upside, their 9.5-hour battery life should be enough to last you through your 9-5 workday.

Pros

  • Great build quality and IPX4 rating for water resistance.

Cons

  • No noise isolation.

  • Leaks a lot of audio.

See our Office Recommendations

5.5 Wireless Gaming

The Bose Open Earbuds are compatible with Bluetooth-enabled PCs, but their latency is likely too high to be suitable for wireless gaming. They aren't compatible with Xbox One or PS4 consoles.

See our Wireless Gaming Recommendations

5.3 Wired Gaming

The Bose Open Earbuds are wireless-only, so they aren't suitable for wired gaming.

6.1 Phone Calls

The Bose Sport Open Earbuds are middling for phone calls. Their integrated mic captures your voice clearly, although it struggles to separate speech from ambient noise around you. Since these headphones don't really cover your ears, they also don't block out any noise around you, so it may be harder to focus on your conversation.

Pros

  • Great build quality and IPX4 rating for water resistance.

Cons

  • No noise isolation.

  • Mediocre noise handling.

  • 5.5 Neutral Sound
  • 5.9 Commute/Travel
  • 8.2 Sports/Fitness
  • 5.6 Office
  • 5.5 Wireless Gaming
  • 5.3 Wired Gaming
  • 6.1 Phone Calls

+ Create your own

  1. Updated Aug 11, 2021: Converted to Test Bench 1.5.
  2. Updated Mar 11, 2021: Review published.
  3. Updated Mar 08, 2021: Early access published.
  4. Updated Feb 28, 2021: Our testers have started testing this product.
  5. Updated Feb 26, 2021: The product has arrived in our lab, and our testers will start evaluating it soon.
  6. Updated Feb 17, 2021: We've purchased the product and are waiting for it to arrive in our lab.

Differences Between Sizes And Variants

The Bose Sport Open Earbuds come in one color variant: 'Triple Black'. You can see our model's label here. If you come across another variant of these headphones, please let us know in the discussions and we'll update our review.

Compared To Other Headphones

The Bose Sport Open Earbuds are open-back, open-earheadphones designed for sports and fitness. Unlike the Bose Sport Earbuds Truly Wireless or the Bose SoundSport Free Truly Wireless, they sit slightly outside of your ear to give you better spatial awareness while outdoors. However, due to this design, they may not be comfortable for all users and theylack a bit of low-bass. While they have a carrying case, it doesn't hold any extra charges, which can bea little limiting.Check out our recommendations for the best headphones for running, the best open-back headphones, and the best Bose headphones.

Bose Sport Earbuds Truly Wireless

The Bose Sport Earbuds Truly Wireless are more versatile headphones than the Bose Sport Open Earbuds Truly Wireless. While both headphones are designed for sports, the Sport Earbuds are more comfortable and stable. They have a better-balanced sound profile and their carrying case holds two additional charges, which is nice. However, the Sport Open have a completely open-ear design thatallows you to hear more ambient noise around you, which make them even more suitable for running outdoors.

Compare Side-by-Side

SEE OUR REVIEW

AfterShokz Aeropex Bone Conduction

The AfterShokz Aeropex Bone Conduction and the Bose Sport Open Earbuds are both headphones designed for outdoor use. The AfterShokz have a bone conduction transducer that uses vibrations on your temples to produce audio, and theydon't go into your ear at all, which helps keep you aware of your surroundings. They're more comfortable,have a longer continuous battery life, and support multi-device pairing. However, the Bose sit outside of your ear, also leaving it completely open so that you can hear what's going on around you. They're more comfortable, better-built, stable, and have a more neutral sound profile.

Compare Side-by-Side

SEE OUR REVIEW

Bose SoundSport Free Truly Wireless

The Bose SoundSport Free Truly Wireless and the Bose Sport Open Earbuds Truly Wireless are both well-suited for sports and depending on your preferences, you may favor one over the other. The SoundSport Free are more comfortable, have a better-balanced sound profile, and leak less audio. Their carrying case also holds two additional charges. However, the Bose Sport Open is designed for outdoor running, which some users may prefer, as they don't go inside your ear. They also have longer-lasting continuous battery life.

Compare Side-by-Side

SEE OUR REVIEW

Sony LinkBuds Truly Wireless

The Bose Sport Open Earbuds Truly Wireless are better for sports than the Sony LinkBuds Truly Wireless. They have a significantly more comfortable, stable fit and better build quality. They reproduce a bit more bass and have longer continuous battery life. On the other hand, the Sony headphones have a smaller design that you may prefer if you can get a good fit. They also come with sound customization features and a case that holds extra charges, unlike the Bose.

Compare Side-by-Side

SEE OUR REVIEW

Apple AirPods (2nd generation) Truly Wireless

The Bose Sport Open Earbuds are better for outdoor sports and fitness, while the Apple AirPods (2nd generation) Truly Wireless offer a more versatile overall performance. The Bose are more stable and don't cover your ear, so you canstay aware of your surroundings. They also have more consistent audio reproduction.However, the Apple are more comfortable, have five additional charges in their carrying case, and have an H1 chipso that you can seamlessly pair them with your Apple devices. Their sound profile is better balanced, too.

Compare Side-by-Side

SEE OUR REVIEW

Sony Float Run Wireless

The Bose Sport Open Earbuds Truly Wireless are better open-ear sports headphones than theSony Float Run Wireless. The Bose are slightly more stable and comfortable for long runs and workouts. They also have a better-performing mic than the Sony headphones and are more portable. However, despite being less stable, the Sony headphones have better frequency response consistency. This means that you won't have to constantly adjust them during your workout to get a consistent level of audio delivery. The Bose headphones have a similar outer-ear build but require more adjustment to get the right fit.

Compare Side-by-Side

SEE OUR REVIEW

+ Show more

Test Results

Bose Sport Open Earbuds Truly Wireless Review (1)

Design

Design

Style

Type Earbuds

Enclosure Open-Back

Wireless Truly Wireless

Transducer Dynamic

The Bose Sport Open Earbuds have an unusual design. They have thick ear-hooks to hold the headphones in place, as the earbud sits just outside of your ear canal. They look a bit bulky, though, and only come in black.

7.0

Design

Comfort

Weight 0.07 lbs

Clamping Force

0 lbs

The Bose Open Earbuds are decently comfortable. Once you're placed them correctly, you don't really feel them and they don't move around too much. That said, you won't be able to wear them if you're already wearing glasses or have a mask on. They're also quite big, can put pressure behind your ear, and don't have a very malleable design, so people who have bigger earlobes may find them a bit more tricky to wear.

LEARN ABOUT COMFORT

6.9

Design

Controls

OS Compatibility

Not OS specific

Ease Of Use Great

Feedback Good

Call/Music Control Yes

Volume Control Yes

Microphone Control No

Channel Mixing

No

Noise Cancelling Control No

Talk-Through

No

Additional Controls Voice Assistant

The Bose Sport Open Earbuds have alright controls. The right earbud has most of the controls. Using the button, you can play or pause audio with one press, skip a track forward with two presses, skip a track backward with three presses, and a long press turns them on, off, or accesses pairing mode. You can also slow tap the touch-sensitive surface to raise the volume. The left bud allows you to check the battery level with one press of its button, activate voice assistant with a long press, and lower the volume by slow tapping the touch surface. Both touch surfaces are responsive and you can also turn them off if it bothers you. The buttons are responsive, and there are voice prompts when connected, as well as a battery level when powered on.

LEARN ABOUT CONTROLS

10

Design

Breathability

Avg.Temp.Difference 0 °C

The Bose Sport Open Earbuds aren't very malleable, so we can't properly test them using our rig. However, as their design doesn't really cover the ear, we don't expect them to trap heat and their average temperature difference should be negligible.

LEARN ABOUT BREATHABILITY

9.0

Design

Portability

L 2.5" (6.4 cm)

W 1.9" (4.8 cm)

H 0.8" (2.0 cm)

Volume 3.80 in³ (62.27 cm³)

Transmitter Required No

The Bose Sport Open Earbuds are outstandingly portable. They're a bit bulkier than traditionally designed truly wireless headphones. They should still fit in most pockets, though.

LEARN ABOUT PORTABILITY

7.5

Design

Case

Type Hard case

L 4.5" (11.4 cm)

W 2.8" (7.1 cm)

H 1.2" (3.0 cm)

Volume 15.00 in³ (245.80 cm³)

The Bose Sport Open Earbuds have a good case. It's made of plastic with a fabric inner covering. It has a magnet to keep it closed. However, the case won't turn off or recharge the headphones, so you need to remember to turn them off before putting them in their case.

LEARN ABOUT CASE

8.0

Design

Build Quality

The Bose Sport Open Earbuds have a great build quality. They're made of a plastic composite, which makes them feel sturdy and durable. They're also rated IPX4 for water resistance, although we don't currently test for this.

LEARN ABOUT BUILD QUALITY

8.0

Design

Stability

These headphones are impressively stable. However, it depends a lot on the shape and size of your ears. While they shouldn't fall off during moderate physical exercise, you may experience the feeling that they could fall off.

LEARN ABOUT STABILITY

Design

Headshots 1

Design

Headshots 2

Design

Top

Design

In The Box

  • Bose Sport Open Earbuds headphones
  • USB-A proprietary charging cradle
  • Carrying case
  • Manual

Sound

Sound

Sound Profile

Bass Amount

-17.56 dB

Treble Amount

-2.6 dB

As the Bose Open Earbuds sit outside of the ear canal and they have an open-back design, they really struggle to reproduce low-bass, so genres like EDM and hip-hop lack thump and rumble. That said, they have a neutral mid-range, which helps vocal-centric content sound clear and accurate. Unfortunately, they lack any sound customization features to help tweak their sound.

LEARN ABOUT SOUND PROFILE

8.5

Sound

Frequency Response Consistency

Avg. Std. Deviation

0.3 dB

These headphones have an excellent frequency response consistency. While there are small deviations in bass and treble delivery, you should be able to achieve a consistent sound if you take the time to adjust them each time you use them.

LEARN ABOUT FREQUENCY RESPONSE CONSISTENCY

Sound

Raw Frequency Response

LEARN ABOUT RAW FREQUENCY RESPONSE

1.0

Sound

Bass Accuracy

Std. Err.

16.16 dB

Low-Frequency Extension

100.79 Hz

Low-Bass

-32.16 dB

Mid-Bass

-8.48 dB

High-Bass

3.18 dB

The Bose Sport Open Earbuds have bad bass accuracy. They're lacking a lot of low-bass, which is due to their open-back, open-ear design which sits away from your ear canal. Their mid-bass is also underemphasized, so your mixes lack punch and body. However, the high-bass adds boom, although some users may find it a bit muddy.

LEARN ABOUT BASS ACCURACY

8.9

Sound

Mid Accuracy

Std. Err.

1.45 dB

Low-Mid

1.27 dB

Mid-Mid

0.26 dB

High-Mid

1.62 dB

The Bose Sport Open Earbuds have excellent mid-accuracy. The response is very flat and neutral, resulting in present, accurate, and detailed vocals and lead instruments.

LEARN ABOUT MID ACCURACY

8.0

Sound

Treble Accuracy

Std. Err.

3.05 dB

Low-Treble

1 dB

Mid-Treble

-4.8 dB

High-Treble

-6.51 dB

These headphones have good treble accuracy. The low-treble is even and slightly overemphasized, resulting in detailed and present vocals and lead instruments. The mid-treble is a little underemphasized, though, so sibilants like cymbals are dull and lispy.

LEARN ABOUT TREBLE ACCURACY

5.4

Sound

Peaks/Dips

Peaks

3.42 dB

Dips

2.04 dB

The peaks and dips performance is disappointing. There's a dip in the low-bass, so your mixes lack thump and rumble. The peak in the high-bass adds intense boom, which can muddy your mix. Another peak in the low-treble adds some detail to vocals and lead instruments while a dip in the mid-treble weakens sibilants.

LEARN ABOUT PEAKS/DIPS

4.7

Sound

Imaging

Weighted Group Delay

3.18

Weighted Phase Mismatch

42.2

Weighted Amplitude Mismatch

1.33

Weighted Frequency Mismatch

2.98

The Bose Open Earbuds have poor imaging. There are a few large peaks in their group delay response, indicating loose bass. The treble range falls under the audibility threshold though, ensuring transparent treble. While the left and right drivers are well-matched in amplitude, they're mismatched in frequency and phase response, so objects like footsteps may not be accurately placed within the stereo image. However, these results are only valid for our unit, and your experience may vary.

LEARN ABOUT IMAGING

3.4

Sound

Passive Soundstage

PRTF Accuracy (Std. Dev.)

N/A

PRTF Size (Avg.)

N/A

PRTF Distance

N/A

Openness

9.8

Acoustic Space Excitation

4.9

The headphones have a poor passive soundstage. Since they sit outside of your ear canal, they're somewhat able to interact with your outer ear, which helps their soundstage seem a bit more open. However, it won't sound very natural.

LEARN ABOUT PASSIVE SOUNDSTAGE

0

Sound

Virtual Soundstage

Head Modeling

No

Speaker Modeling

No

Room Ambience

No

Head Tracking

No

Virtual Surround

No

LEARN ABOUT VIRTUAL SOUNDSTAGE

6.9

Sound

Weighted Harmonic Distortion

WHD @ 90

0.531

WHD @ 100

0.324

The Bose Sport Open Earbuds have an alright weight harmonic distortion performance. There are a few peaks across the range at a normal listening volume, but it's very minor and can be hard to hear with real-life content. At a high volume, the range falls within good limits, resulting in clean and pure audio reproduction.

LEARN ABOUT WEIGHTED HARMONIC DISTORTION

Sound

Test Settings

Firmware

1.1.2-2174+132ebd5

Power

On

Connection

Bluetooth 5.0

Codec

SBC, 16-bit, 48kHz

EQ

No EQ

ANC

No ANC

Tip/Pad

Default

Microphone

Integrated

These are the settings used to test these headphones. Our results are only valid when using them in this configuration.

LEARN ABOUT TEST SETTINGS

Isolation

0.6

Isolation

Noise Isolation

Isolation Audio

Overall Attenuation

-0.56 dB

Noise Cancelling No

Bass

-0.06 dB

Mid

0.32 dB

Treble

-1.86 dB

The noise isolation performance is bad, but that's to be expected for open-ear headphones. They don't really cover the ear, as this design allows you to stay aware of your surroundings while you run outdoors. Due to this, you can easily hear the rumble of bus engines, ambient chatter, and the hum of an AC unit.

LEARN ABOUT NOISE ISOLATION

5.8

Isolation

Leakage

Leakage Audio

Overall Leakage @ 1ft

46.15 dB

The Bose Open Earbuds have a sub-par leakage performance. Since they don't go inside your ears, they leak a lot of audio, especially in the treble range. Although escaping audio sounds thin, if you're listening to audio at a high volume in a somewhat noisy environment like an office, people around you can hear it.

LEARN ABOUT LEAKAGE

Microphone

Microphone

Microphone Style

Integrated

Yes

In-Line

No

Boom

No

Detachable Boom

No

Mic Yes

LEARN ABOUT MICROPHONE STYLE

7.6

Microphone

Recording Quality

Recorded Speech

LFE

171.98 Hz

FR Std. Dev.

1.7 dB

HFE

6,544.63 Hz

Weighted THD

1.48

Gain

5.63 dB

The Bose Sport Open Earbuds have a good recording quality. Their integrated mic can capture your voice clearly, although it sounds a little thin and lacking in brightness.

LEARN ABOUT RECORDING QUALITY

6.5

Microphone

Noise Handling

SpNR

11.56 dB

Noise Gate

Always On

Speech + Pink Noise Handling

6.5

Speech + Pink Noise Audio Sample

Speech + Subway Noise Handling

6.5

Speech + Subway Noise Audio Sample

The Bose Sport Open Earbuds have mediocre noise handling. The integrated mic struggles to separate your voice from even moderately noisy environments like a busy street.

LEARN ABOUT NOISE HANDLING

Active Features

7.0

Active Features

Battery

Battery Type

Rechargable

Continuous Battery Life

9.5 hrs

Additional Charges

0.0

Total Battery Life

9.5 hrs

Charge Time

1.2 hrs

Power-Saving Feature

Auto-Off Timer

Audio While Charging

No

Passive Playback

No

Charging Port Proprietary

The Bose Open Earbuds have satisfactory battery performance. They're advertised as having 8 hours of playback time with a two-hour charging period. While we measured about 9.5 hours of continuous battery life with a recharge time of just over an hour, battery performance can vary according to usage, so your experience may vary. If you're looking to save battery life, they have an auto-off timer that can be set within their companion app.

LEARN ABOUT BATTERY

7.0

Active Features

App Support

App Name Bose Music

iOS Yes

Android Yes

macOS No

Windows No

Equalizer

No

ANC Control

No

Mic Control No

Room Effects

No

Playback Control

Yes

Button Mapping Yes

Surround Support

No

The Bose Music app is decent. It's pretty basic and it allows you to check the battery level, update the headphones, turn on or off the touch surface volume controls, and adjust the auto-off timer. You can also access a guide on how to use the headphones and see all known devices. However, this app lacks sound enhancement features. If you want more customizable open-ear headphones, try the Sony LinkBuds Truly Wireless.

LEARN ABOUT APP SUPPORT

Connectivity

6.7

Connectivity

Bluetooth

Bluetooth Version

5.1

Multi-Device Pairing

No

NFC Pairing

No

Line Of Sight Range

153.00 ft (46.63 m)

PC Latency (SBC)

329 ms

PC Latency (aptX)

N/A

PC Latency (aptX HD)

N/A

PC Latency (aptX-LL)

N/A

iOS Latency

86 ms

Android Latency

120 ms

The Bose Sport Open have alright Bluetooth connectivity. They don't support multi-device or NFC pairing, and their latency on PC is likely too high to be suitable for gaming or streaming video. Their latency on iOS and Android devices is much lower, though. That said, some devices and apps compensate for latency, so your experience may vary.

LEARN ABOUT BLUETOOTH

0

Connectivity

Non-Bluetooth Wireless

Non-BT Line Of Sight Range

N/A

Non-BT Latency

N/A

LEARN ABOUT NON-BLUETOOTH WIRELESS

0

Connectivity

Wired

Analog Audio

No

USB Audio

No

Detachable No

Length N/A

Connection

No Wired Option

Analog/USB Audio Latency

N/A

These Bluetooth-only headphones can't be used wired. They come with a USB-A to proprietary charging cradle to recharge the headphones.

LEARN ABOUT WIRED

Connectivity

PC Compatibility

Analog

No

Wired USB

No

Non-BT Wireless

No

Connectivity

PlayStation Compatibility

PS4 Analog

No

PS4 Wired USB

No

PS4 Non-BT Wireless

No

PS5 Analog

No

PS5 Wired USB

No

PS5 Non-BT Wireless

No

LEARN ABOUT PLAYSTATION COMPATIBILITY

Connectivity

Xbox Compatibility

Xbox One Analog

No

Xbox One Wired USB

No

Xbox One Non-BT Wireless

No

Xbox Series X|S Analog

No

Xbox Series X|S Wired USB

No

Xbox Series X|S Non-BT Wireless

No

LEARN ABOUT XBOX COMPATIBILITY

2.2

Connectivity

Base/Dock

Type

Wired USB dock

USB Input

No

Line In

No

Line Out

No

Optical Input

No

RCA Input

No

Dock Charging

Yes

Power Supply

USB

These headphones come with a proprietary charging cradle, which can be annoying if you forget it somewhere but need to charge them up. It doesn't hold any charges or have any inputs.

LEARN ABOUT BASE/DOCK

Bose Sport Open Earbuds Truly Wireless Review (2024)

FAQs

Bose Sport Open Earbuds Truly Wireless Review? ›

However, some potential weaknesses that users and reviewers have identified include: Limited Noise Isolation: Due to their open design, these earbuds may not offer as much noise isolation as traditional in-ear or over-ear headphones.

What are the disadvantages of Bose earbuds? ›

However, some potential weaknesses that users and reviewers have identified include: Limited Noise Isolation: Due to their open design, these earbuds may not offer as much noise isolation as traditional in-ear or over-ear headphones.

How long do Bose open earbuds last? ›

Bose claims you can get seven and a half hours of battery life on the Ultra Open Ear Earbuds without Immersive Audio (up to four and a half hours when it's on), which is more than the six hours on both the company's QuietComfort 2 and the QuietComfort Ultra or the seven hours on the open-ear JVC Nearphones.

What is the difference between Bose earbuds and sport earbuds? ›

The QuietComfort Earbuds have a better-balanced sound profile, a great ANC feature, and a better battery performance. However, the Sport are better for physical exercise as they're more comfortable and stable.

Can you wear glasses with Bose open earbuds? ›

Putting on the earbuds

Look for the L (left) and R (right) markings on the inside surface of each earbud. To get the best fit while wearing glasses, remove your glasses before putting on the earbuds. When the earbuds are stable and comfortable, put your glasses back on.

Is Bose earbuds better than Airpods? ›

However, the Bose are slightly better balanced, their ANC blocks out a bit more noise across all frequencies, and their integrated mic has a better recording quality. The Bose also have a better companion app and a lower latency on iOS and Android, although some apps compensate for latency differently.

Are Bose earbuds good or bad? ›

It works surprisingly well, delivering long-lasting comfort and clear sound that meets or beats most such options I've tried, including Sony's holey LinkBuds (8/10, WIRED Recommends). You'll pay a remarkably high price for that distinction, which puts the Ultra in a tight spot.

Are open-ear earbuds worth it? ›

TechRadar Verdict. Bose's attempt at the open-ear form factor is a great success from our early testing, The sound is incredible, the earbuds are comfortable and easy to wear, and they don't shift during runs despite a few threatening wobbles.

Do Bose Sport earbuds fall out? ›

Since I've worn the Bose style for a long time, it's something that's natural to me. If you're new to it, it might take some getting used to. If all you know are the kind that shove into your ear canal, these will feel like they're going to fall out. They won't!

Do Bose Sport earbuds fall out when running? ›

And the eartips won't hurt your ears no matter how long you exercise and won't fall out no matter how much you move. Get ready to beat your personal best, again and again. "The Bose Sport Earbuds serve up excellent audio quality, durability and a comfortable fit."

Which Bose earbuds should I buy? ›

Compare SpecsThe Best Bose Headphones for 2024
Our PicksBose QuietComfort Ultra Earbuds See It $299.00 at AmazonBose QuietComfort Ultra Headphones See It $429.00 at Amazon
RatingEditors' Choice 4.5 Editor ReviewEditors' Choice 4.5 Editor Review
TypeIn-CanalCircumaural (over-ear)
Wireless
True Wireless
4 more rows

Are Beats or Bose better for earbuds? ›

The Bose are more comfortable, have a slightly better noise isolation performance, and their continuous battery life is better. They also have sound customization features to help you adjust their sound to suit your tastes. That said, you may still prefer the Beats if you're an iOS user.

Is Samsung or Bose earbuds better? ›

The Bose have much better build quality, a longer continuous battery life, and a significantly better noise isolation performance. They have a more neutral sound profile, which some listeners may prefer, and their touch-sensitive controls are easier to use.

Do Bose open earbuds have a microphone? ›

The voice mic array works fine, and I could easily understand every word from a test recording on my iPhone. The signal emphasizes clarity but is a little weak compared with that of the Bose QuietComfort Ultra Earbuds. Intelligibility is still above average though.

Can you wear Bose earbuds to bed? ›

The best wireless earbuds for sleeping are the Bose Sleepbuds II. The batteries may take forever to charge, but they also last longer than any truly wireless earbuds on the market. The Bose Sleepbuds II masks noise around you and also has a low profile in your ear, so you can sleep in any position without discomfort.

What are the pros and cons of Bose QuietComfort earbuds? ›

Pros: class-leading adjustable noise cancelling, solid battery life, decent case, good sound, customisable and comfortable, sweat resistance, good controls, decent call quality. Cons: expensive, only SBC and AAC not higher quality audio formats, no multipoint connectivity, only right earbud can be used on its own.

Is Bose a good brand for earbuds? ›

These earbuds are the best I've experienced when it comes to their noise cancellation effectiveness, bar none. Bose's transparency mode is also excellent and provides the illusion that you're not wearing earbuds at all.

Are noise Cancelling earbuds bad for your ears? ›

While noise-cancelling headphones and earbuds may allow you to listen to music at lower volumes without ambient disturbances, they have no controls to limit noise levels of the music. If the noise level is over 85 dBA, it may be capable of damaging your hearing.

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