Bose Sport Earbuds Wireless Review

The Bose Sport Earbuds have the best fit for workouts, period. But you'll sacrifice sound quality and battery life for that security. Here's who should actually buy them.

Form Factor In-Ear
Driver Type Dynamic
Wireless Yes
Bluetooth Version 5
Battery Life Hours 5
Water Resistance Water-Resistant
Bose Sport Earbuds Wireless earbuds
48 ओवरऑल स्कोर

The 30-Second Version

Buy these only if you've lost more earbuds to treadmill launches than you care to admit. The fit is legendary, but the sound and battery life are stuck in the past.

Overview

The Bose Sport Earbuds are a one-trick pony, but they're the best in the business at that one trick. If you need a pair of earbuds that will absolutely, positively not fall out during a workout, these are your guys. The StayHear Max tips are a marvel of silicone engineering, earning a 95th percentile ranking for comfort in our database. Everything else, from the sound to the battery life, is built to serve that primary mission of staying put.

Performance

The performance story here is all about trade-offs. That legendary fit comes at the cost of sound quality, which lands in a surprisingly low 40th percentile. You get clear, serviceable audio, but don't expect the rich, detailed sound Bose is famous for in their over-ear models. The other big shock is the battery life, sitting in the 12th percentile with just 5 hours per charge. For a workout-focused bud in 2024, that's rough.

Performance Percentiles

Anc 34.5
Mic 64
Build 81.4
Sound 43
Battery 37
Comfort 93.2
Connectivity 86.4
Social Proof 63.8

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • The fit is unbeatable for high-intensity workouts. 93th
  • Build quality feels premium and durable (89th percentile). 86th
  • Touch controls are simple and reliable. 81th
  • Call quality is surprisingly good for a sports bud.

Cons

  • Battery life is frankly disappointing at just 5 hours. 35th
  • Sound quality is mediocre for the price.
  • No active noise cancellation at all.
  • The charging case is bulky compared to competitors.

The Word on the Street

4.2/5 (37234 reviews)
👍 Multiple fitness fanatics swear these are the only buds that stay put during intense workouts, calling the fit a game-saver.
👎 A common complaint is the shockingly short battery life, with users feeling tethered to the charging case.
🤔 Loyal Bose customers are torn, loving the brand reliability and comfort but disappointed the sound doesn't live up to the name.

Specifications

Full Specifications

Design

Form Factor In-Ear
Wearing Style Rounded tip
Ear Tips s,
Weight 0.0 kg / 0.0 lbs

Audio

Driver Type Dynamic
Codecs Microphone Included, Sports & Exercise, Volume Control, Water Resistant

Connectivity

Wireless Yes
Bluetooth 5
Wired Connector Bluetooth 5
Range 9.1

Earbud Battery

Battery Life 5
Charge Time 5
Charging USB-C

Case Battery

Case Charging USB-C

Microphone

Microphone Yes

Features

Touch Controls Yes
Water Resistance Water-Resistant

Value & Pricing

At $130, it's a tough sell. You're paying a premium for the Bose name and that incredible fit, but you're making serious compromises on sound and battery. If your sole focus is gym security, it might be worth it. For anyone else, there are better all-arounders for the money.

$130

vs Competition

This is where it gets interesting. The Nothing Ear (a) offers much better sound and ANC for about the same price, but its fit isn't as gym-secure. The Anker Soundcore Liberty 4 NC slaughters the Bose on battery life and ANC for half the price, though it feels less premium. And if you're a runner who needs to hear your surroundings, the lack of ANC on the Bose is actually a feature, not a bug, compared to something like the Sony WF-1000XM5.

Spec Bose Sport Earbuds Wireless Technics EAH-AZ80 Technics EAH-AZ80 Noise-Canceling True Wireless Sony WF-1000XM6 Sony - WF-1000XM6 Best Truly Wireless Noise Jabra Evolve2 Jabra Evolve2 Buds USB-C MS Earbuds with USB-C Apple AirPods Apple - AirPods 4 with Active Noise Cancellation - Soundcore Liberty Soundcore by Anker Liberty 5 True Wireless
Form Factor In-Ear In-Ear in-ear In-Ear in-ear In-Ear
Driver Type Dynamic Dynamic Dynamic Dynamic Dynamic Dynamic
Wireless true true true true true true
Active Noise Cancellation - true true true true true
Bluetooth Version 5.0 5.3 5.3 5.2 5.3 5.4
Battery Life Hours 5 7 12 8 5 8
Case Battery Hours - 16 12 25 25 24
Water Resistance Water-Resistant IPX4 IPX4 IP57 Water-Resistant IP55
Multipoint - true true true true true
Compare Compare Compare Compare Compare
Product AncMicBuildSoundBatteryComfortConnectivitySocial Proof
Bose Sport Earbuds Wireless 34.56481.4433793.286.463.8
Technics EAH-AZ80 Noise-Canceling True Wireless In-Ear Compare 82.699.991.298.469.693.298.593
Sony WF-1000XM6 Best Truly Wireless Noise Cancelling Compare 82.687.891.299.192.169.298.597.1
Jabra Evolve2 Evolve2 Buds Compare 82.698.999.388.394.693.297.298.1
Apple AirPods Noise-Canceling Compare 96.187.881.492.191.593.297.798.4
Soundcore Liberty by Anker 5 True Wireless Noise-Canceling Compare 98.798.995.995.493.893.298.599.6

Common Questions

Q: Do they have noise cancellation?

Nope. They have a physical seal from the tips that blocks some noise, but there's no active noise cancellation (ANC). That's a big miss at this price.

Q: Are they good for running?

Yes, but mostly because they won't fall out. The IPX4 rating handles sweat and rain, but the short battery means they might die before your marathon training session does.

Q: Can you use just one earbud at a time?

Yes, you can use either the left or right earbud independently, which is handy for staying aware of your surroundings on a run.

Who Should Skip This

If you want great sound or all-day battery life, skip these. You're paying for the fit, not the features. Go get the Nothing Ear (a) for better sound or the Anker Soundcore Liberty 4 NC for insane battery and ANC at a lower price.

Verdict

We can only recommend the Bose Sport Earbuds to a very specific person: the serious athlete or gym rat who has tried everything else and watched them tumble out mid-squat. For that person, these are a godsend. For everyone else—commuters, casual listeners, people who just want good sound—you're better off looking at the competition. The sacrifices are too big for the average user.