Beyerdynamic AMIRON 200 Beyerdynamic Amiron 200 Open True Wireless Review

The Beyerdynamic Amiron 200 offer a secure, open-ear fit for athletes but demand a $200 premium for average sound and battery life. A niche tool, not a mainstream star.

Form Factor Open-Ear
Driver Type Dynamic
Wireless Yes
Active Noise Cancellation No
Bluetooth Version 5.3
Battery Life Hours 11
Case Battery Hours 25
Water Resistance Water-Resistant
Multipoint Yes
Beyerdynamic AMIRON 200 Beyerdynamic Amiron 200 Open True Wireless earbuds
68.7 Pontuação Geral

The 30-Second Version

The Beyerdynamic Amiron 200 are niche, open-ear wireless buds built for athletes who need to hear their surroundings. You get a secure hook fit and a great microphone, but you sacrifice sound quality, battery life, and noise cancellation. At $200, they're expensive for their average performance, but if safety during your workout is non-negotiable, they're a solid option. For everyone else, look elsewhere.

Overview

Let's be real: most wireless earbuds are trying to seal you off from the world. The Beyerdynamic Amiron 200 Open True Wireless does the exact opposite. These are open-ear headphones with an over-ear hook design, and they're built for one specific thing: letting you hear your music and your surroundings at the same time. That makes them a weird, niche product in a sea of noise-canceling clones.

If you're a runner, cyclist, or someone who works out in a gym and needs to stay aware of traffic, machines, or people around you, this is your product. The hook design is meant to keep them secure during high-movement activities, and the open-ear concept means you won't be completely oblivious. It's a safety-first approach to audio, which is refreshing.

Beyerdynamic is known for its studio headphones, so seeing them dive into the sporty, open-ear wireless market is interesting. They're betting on their build quality and a specific use case over mass-market appeal. At $200, they're asking you to pay a premium for a very particular experience.

Performance

Our database puts the Amiron 200's sound quality in the 40th percentile. That's not a typo. For pure audio fidelity, they're squarely average. The open design and focus on situational awareness inherently sacrifice bass response and overall sound isolation. You're not getting the deep, thumping lows or immersive soundstage of a sealed in-ear monitor. The 20Hz-20kHz frequency response is standard, but the execution is tuned for clarity over power, which makes sense when you need to hear a car horn over your playlist.

Where these buds shine is in their core function. The microphone scores in the 82nd percentile, which is excellent. Calls should be clear, even in moderately noisy environments. Connectivity is also solid at the 72nd percentile, so dropouts during a run are less likely. The trade-off is clear: you're trading top-tier music immersion for reliable comms and environmental awareness. The performance story here is all about the trade-offs Beyerdynamic chose.

Performance Percentiles

Anc 72.8
Mic 88.3
Build 74.9
Sound 84.3
Battery 91.1
Comfort 57
Connectivity 98.4
Social Proof 23.7

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Excellent microphone quality (82nd percentile) for clear phone and voice calls. 98th
  • Reliable Bluetooth connectivity (72nd percentile) minimizes audio dropouts. 91th
  • Open-ear design provides crucial situational awareness for outdoor activities. 88th
  • Secure over-ear hook design is built for running and high-movement sports. 84th
  • IP54 rating offers decent protection against sweat and light rain.

Cons

  • Sound quality is only average (40th percentile), lacking bass and immersion. 24th
  • Battery life is poor (21st percentile) at just 11 hours per charge.
  • No active noise cancellation (ANC scores 39th percentile), by design.
  • Build and comfort scores are below average (39th and 38th percentile).
  • Very low social proof score (9th percentile) suggests limited adoption and reviews.

Specifications

Full Specifications

Design

Form Factor Open-Ear
Wearing Style Dual Ear True Wireless with Ear Clip/Hook
Weight 0.1 kg / 0.2 lbs

Audio

Driver Type Dynamic
Drivers 1
Freq Min 20
Freq Max 20000
Codecs AAC, SBC
Surround Beyerdynamic AMIRON 200 True Wireless Bluetooth Earbuds w/Ear Hooks. Running, Biking, Sport, Fitness Open Headphones with 36Hrs Playtime. IP54 Weather Resistant Earphones, Lightweight, Mic. (Black) |

Noise Control

ANC No
Transparency Yes

Connectivity

Wireless Yes
Bluetooth 5.3
Profiles HFP, A2DP, AVRCP
Multipoint Yes
Wired Connector USB-C
Range 15

Earbud Battery

Battery Life 11
Charge Time 2
Fast Charging 5min=1.5hrs
Charging USB-C

Case Battery

Case Battery 25
Case Charging USB-C
Wireless Charging Yes
Capacity 70

Microphone

Microphone Yes
Mic Count 2
NC Mic Yes

Features

Touch Controls No
App iOS, Android
Volume Limiting No
Water Resistance Water-Resistant

Value & Pricing

At $200, the Amiron 200 is a tough sell on pure specs. You're paying a premium for a specialized design. For the same money, you could get flagship noise-canceling buds from Sony or Bose that offer vastly better sound, ANC, and often similar or better battery life. The value proposition hinges entirely on how much you need that open-ear, secure-hook design. If you're an athlete who prioritizes safety and awareness above all else, and you're willing to pay for a reputable brand's take on it, then the price might be justified. For everyone else, it looks expensive for what you get.

Price History

US$ 197 US$ 198 US$ 199 US$ 200 US$ 201 US$ 202 11 de mar.12 de mar. US$ 200

vs Competition

The most direct competitor is something like the Shokz OpenRun, which uses bone conduction for even more awareness. The Shokz are often cheaper and more purpose-built for sport, but their audio quality is generally considered worse than even the Amiron's average offering. The Amiron tries to be a hybrid.

If you look at traditional wireless earbuds at this price, the gap widens. The Sony WF-1000XM5 (a top competitor) will demolish the Amiron 200 in sound quality, noise cancellation, and battery life. But, you can't safely run in traffic with them. The Nothing Ear (a) offers great value with good sound and ANC for half the price. The trade-off is clear: you buy the Amiron 200 for its specific form factor, and you accept significant compromises in audio performance and battery to get it.

Spec Beyerdynamic AMIRON 200 Beyerdynamic Amiron 200 Open True Wireless Technics Technics EAH-AZ100 Reference-Class True Wireless Sony Sony WF-1000XM5 Noise-Canceling True Wireless Apple AirPods 4 Active Noise Cancellation Apple - AirPods 4 with Active Noise Cancellation - Bose Bose QuietComfort Ultra True Wireless Jabra Jabra Evolve2 Buds USB-C MS Earbuds with USB-C
Form Factor Open-Ear In-Ear In-Ear True Wireless In-Ear In-Ear
Driver Type Dynamic Dynamic Sony WF-1000XM5 Noise-Canceling True Wireless In-Ear Headphones (Black) Dynamic Dynamic Dynamic
Wireless true true true true true true
Active Noise Cancellation false true true true true true
Bluetooth Version 5.3 5.3 5.3 5.3 5.3 5.2
Battery Life Hours 11 8 6 5 6 8
Case Battery Hours 25 11 16 25 18 25
Water Resistance Water-Resistant IPX4 IPX4 Water-Resistant IPX4 IP57
Multipoint true true true true true true

Common Questions

Q: How is the sound quality compared to regular wireless earbuds?

Our testing puts it in the 40th percentile, which is average at best. The open design means you lose bass and isolation. They're tuned for clarity and awareness, not for immersive, powerful sound. If audio fidelity is your top priority, these aren't for you.

Q: Are these good for running in traffic or busy gyms?

Yes, that's their entire purpose. The open-ear design lets you hear cars, people, and gym equipment clearly. The over-ear hooks are meant to keep them secure during high-impact movement. They score very low for travel but are built for this specific active scenario.

Q: Is 11 hours of battery life good?

Not really. It scores in the 21st percentile, which is poor. Many competitors offer similar or better life, and some offer much more. The 25-hour case boost helps, but the earbuds themselves don't last exceptionally long between charges.

Q: Can I use these for making calls?

Absolutely. This is one of their strengths. The microphone performance is in the 82nd percentile, which is excellent. Call quality should be clear and reliable, making them good for taking calls while you're out on a walk or run.

Who Should Skip This

Commuters and travelers should avoid these. With a travel score of 12.2/100 and no active noise cancellation, they're ill-suited for planes, trains, or noisy coffee shops. You'll hear all the ambient noise, and the audio won't be immersive enough to overcome it. Audiophiles should also skip them; the average sound quality won't satisfy. If you just want the best all-around wireless earbuds for the money, the $200 price tag is hard to justify when you can get superior sound, ANC, and battery from brands like Sony, Technics, or even Anker's Soundcore line for the same or less. Look at those instead.

Verdict

Buy the Beyerdynamic Amiron 200 Open True Wireless if you are a serious runner, cyclist, or gym-goer who needs to maintain full environmental awareness and prioritizes secure fit above everything else. The excellent mic and reliable connectivity are great bonuses for taking calls on the move. This is a tool for a specific job.

Skip these entirely if you want immersive sound, long battery life, or noise cancellation for commuting, travel, or focused listening. Our data shows they score terribly for travel (12.2/100) and are weak for general use. For most people, a good pair of standard wireless earbuds, even with a transparency mode, will be a better all-arounder.