Jabra Jabra Evolve2 65 Stereo Wireless On-Ear Headset Review

The Jabra Evolve2 65 is a comfortable, call-focused wireless headset, but its lack of ANC and high price make it a hard sell for most people.

Form Factor On-Ear
Driver Size Mm 40
Wireless Yes
Active Noise Cancellation No
Open Closed Back Closed
Bluetooth Version 5
Battery Life Hours 37
Jabra Jabra Evolve2 65 Stereo Wireless On-Ear Headset headphones
51 Pontuação Geral

The 30-Second Version

A comfortable, call-focused headset that's great at its job but not much else. It lacks ANC and has mediocre sound for music. Its 95th percentile comfort score is the highlight. Only worth it if you need certified UC gear for work.

Overview

The Jabra Evolve2 65 is a wireless on-ear headset built for one thing: work calls. It's got the battery life and UC certifications to be a reliable desk companion. But it's not trying to be your all-day music or travel headphone. That focus is its biggest strength and its most obvious limitation.

Performance

The performance story is all about consistency, not flash. The battery life is solid, landing in the 80th percentile, and the 15-minute quick charge for 8 hours is a lifesaver for forgotten charging sessions. Call quality is its forte, with a three-mic array that scores in the 73rd percentile for clarity. For music and media, the 40mm drivers are fine, scoring a decent 71st percentile, but don't expect deep, immersive sound. The big asterisk is the lack of active noise cancellation. It relies on passive isolation, which puts it in the bottom 30% for ANC performance. If you need to block out a noisy office, that's a real trade-off.

Performance Percentiles

Anc 37.4
Mic 85
Build 44.9
Sound 84.5
Battery 89.8
Comfort 92
Connectivity 90.7
Social Proof 45

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Battery life that easily lasts a full work week. 92th
  • Super comfortable for all-day wear, scoring in the 95th percentile. 91th
  • Reliable wireless connectivity with multipoint pairing. 90th
  • Quick charge feature gets you 8 hours from 15 minutes. 85th

Cons

  • No active noise cancellation at this price is hard to justify.
  • Build quality feels a bit plasticky for nearly $300.
  • Sound quality is just okay for music and media.
  • The on-ear design can get warm during long calls.

The Word on the Street

3.0/5 (12 reviews)
👎 Many buyers feel the build quality and materials don't justify the high price tag.
🤔 Users praise the comfort and battery life but are consistently disappointed by the lack of active noise cancellation.

Specifications

Full Specifications

Design

Form Factor On-Ear
Open/Closed Closed
Foldable Yes
Weight 0.2 kg / 0.4 lbs

Audio

Driver Size 40
Freq Min 20
Freq Max 20000

Noise Control

ANC No

Connectivity

Wireless Yes
Bluetooth 5
Profiles HSP 1.2, HFP 1.7, A2DP 1.3, AVRCP 1.6, PBAP 1.1, SSP 1.2
Multipoint Yes
Cable Length 1.2
Range 30

Battery

Battery Life 37
Charge Time 1.5
Fast Charging 15min=8hrs
Charging USB-C

Microphone

Microphone Yes
Mic Count 3
NC Mic No

Features

Touch Controls No
App iOS, Android

Value & Pricing

At $286, the value proposition is narrow. If you need a dedicated, certified headset for Microsoft Teams or Zoom calls, the price makes sense for the reliability and features. But if you're looking for a do-it-all headphone for calls, music, and commuting, it's a tough sell. You're paying a premium for work-specific certifications that don't help you anywhere else.

CA$ 393

vs Competition

Stacked up, it's a specialist vs. generalists. The Sony WH-1000XM6 and Sennheiser ACCENTUM Plus destroy it for music and ANC, and they're often around the same price. The Apple AirPods Max is in another league (and price bracket) for ecosystem integration. The Jabra's advantage is its UC certification and call-focused mic array, which those others lack. For pure call quality and office integration, the Jabra wins. For literally everything else, the competitors are better choices.

Common Questions

Q: Does it need the dock to connect, or can I use Bluetooth?

You can use it standalone via Bluetooth 5.0, or use the included USB-A adapter for a more stable, certified connection to your computer.

Q: How good is the noise cancellation?

It doesn't have active noise cancellation (ANC). It uses memory foam ear cushions for passive isolation, which is decent for constant office hum but won't block out louder noises.

Q: Is it comfortable for all-day wear?

Yes, comfort is its best feature, scoring in the top 5% of headsets in our database. The memory foam and lightweight design (176g) are great, though on-ear designs can get warm.

Who Should Skip This

Skip this if you need active noise cancellation for travel or a loud office. Also, look elsewhere if you want a single headphone for great music and calls. For the same money, a Sony WH-1000XM6 gives you world-class ANC and better sound, even if its mic isn't UC-certified.

Verdict

Buy this if your employer is reimbursing you or if you live on video calls and need a reliable, comfortable, certified tool. It's the office workhorse. For anyone else—music lovers, commuters, hybrid workers who want one headphone for everything—your money goes further with a Sony, Sennheiser, or even a JBL.