JBL JBL Sense Pro True Wireless Open-Ear Headphones Review

The JBL Sense Pro open-ear headphones deliver stunning audio while letting you stay aware of your surroundings. But with no real noise cancellation, they're a niche pick.

Form Factor True Wireless
Driver Type Dynamic
Wireless Yes
Active Noise Cancellation No
Bluetooth Version 6
Battery Life Hours 38
Water Resistance IP54
Multipoint Yes
JBL JBL Sense Pro True Wireless Open-Ear Headphones earbuds
61.8 Genel Puan

The 30-Second Version

The JBL Sense Pro are the best-sounding 'hear-through' earbuds we've tested. Fantastic for staying aware, but a hard pass if you need to block out noise.

Overview

The JBL Sense Pro is a weird and wonderful pair of open-ear buds that nails the core mission: letting you listen to music while staying aware of your surroundings. Forget noise cancellation; this is all about letting the world in. The one thing to know is that if you're tired of feeling sealed off from your environment, or if you hate the pressure of in-ear tips, these are a fantastic, high-fidelity alternative. They're built for walks, commutes, and staying connected, not for drowning out the world.

Performance

The sound quality here is the real shocker. For an open-ear design, the audio performance lands in the 96th percentile in our database. That means the bass is surprisingly present thanks to the adaptive boost, and the high-res support via LDAC means you're not sacrificing detail for awareness. The flip side is the ANC score, which sits at a dismal 36th percentile. But that's by design—these don't block sound, they let it through. Just don't expect them to quiet a noisy coffee shop.

Performance Percentiles

Anc 34.8
Mic 94.8
Build 34.2
Sound 97
Battery 97.2
Comfort 88.6
Connectivity 91.7
Social Proof 18.4

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Incredible sound for an open-ear design. The bass actually thumps. 97th
  • You stay fully aware of traffic, conversations, and your surroundings. Perfect for urban use. 97th
  • Battery life is a monster at 38 hours, placing it in the 97th percentile. 95th
  • The adjustable ear hooks are secure and comfortable for all-day wear. 92th

Cons

  • Virtually no noise isolation. If you need quiet, look elsewhere. 18th
  • The IP54 rating is just okay for sweat, making them a weak choice for serious fitness. 34th
  • Call quality is good, but mic performance can struggle in very windy conditions. 35th
  • At $200, you're paying a premium for a very specific, non-isolating experience.

Specifications

Full Specifications

Design

Form Factor True Wireless
Wearing Style Dual Ear True Wireless with Ear Clip/Hook
Weight 0.0 kg / 0.0 lbs

Audio

Driver Type Dynamic
Drivers 1
Freq Min 20
Freq Max 40000
Hi-Res Audio Yes
Codecs LDAC
Surround Spatial Audio

Noise Control

ANC No

Connectivity

Wireless Yes
Bluetooth 6
Profiles HFP 1.9, A2DP, AVRCP
Multipoint Yes

Earbud Battery

Battery Life 38
Charge Time 2
Charging USB-C

Case Battery

Case Charging USB-C
Wireless Charging Yes

Microphone

Microphone Yes
Mic Count 4
NC Mic Yes

Features

Touch Controls No
App iOS, Android
Volume Limiting No
Water Resistance IP54

Value & Pricing

At $200, the Sense Pro is expensive for what is essentially a niche product. You're paying for excellent open-ear audio and top-tier battery life. If staying aware is a non-negotiable priority for you, they're worth it. If you just want great wireless earbuds and don't care about hearing your surroundings, there are better values.

vs Competition

This puts them in a strange spot versus the giants. The Sony WF-1000XM5 and Bose QuietComfort Ultra are the kings of noise cancellation and sound quality in a sealed environment, and they're around the same price. The Sense Pro is their philosophical opposite. A closer competitor is something like the Shokz OpenRun Pro bone conduction headphones, but the JBLs offer much better sound fidelity and a more traditional form factor. If you want awareness with premium audio, the Sense Pro is your best bet. If you want to block the world out, get the Sonys.

Spec JBL JBL Sense Pro True Wireless Open-Ear Headphones Apple AirPods 4 Active Noise Cancellation Apple - AirPods 4 with Active Noise Cancellation - Sony Sony WF-1000XM5 Noise-Canceling True Wireless Technics Technics EAH-AZ80 Noise-Canceling True Wireless Bose Bose QuietComfort Ultra True Wireless Sennheiser Sennheiser MOMENTUM True Wireless 4
Form Factor True Wireless True Wireless In-Ear In-Ear 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 6.0 5.3 5.3 5.3 5.3 5.4
Battery Life Hours 38 5 6 7 6 7.5
Case Battery Hours - 25 16 16 18 22.5
Water Resistance IP54 Water-Resistant IPX4 IPX4 IPX4 IP54
Multipoint true true true true true -
Compare Compare Compare Compare Compare

Common Questions

Q: Can you use these for running or working out?

The IP54 rating means they're fine for light sweat and rain, but they're not built for heavy training. They scored poorly for fitness in our tests. For serious workouts, get a pair with a higher IP rating and more secure fit.

Q: How's the call quality?

Pretty solid for open-ear buds. The four mics do a decent job focusing on your voice, but don't expect magic in super windy or loud places. They're good for walking and talking, not for taking calls on a construction site.

Q: Do they fall out easily?

Not at all. The adjustable split ear hook design is very secure. Comfort scores in the 86th percentile, so most people find them stable and comfortable for long periods.

Who Should Skip This

If you're looking for noise-cancelling earbuds to use on planes or in loud offices, these aren't it. You'll be disappointed by the lack of isolation. Go get the Sony WF-1000XM5 instead. Also, skip these if you're a gym rat; the fitness score is low. Look for dedicated sport buds.

Verdict

We recommend the JBL Sense Pro, but with a big caveat. They are a specialist tool, not a general-purpose champion. For anyone who walks, cycles, or works in an environment where situational awareness is critical, these are arguably the best-sounding open-ear buds you can buy. For everyone else who just wants great earbuds, the excellent ANC and sound of a Sony or Bose model will be a better, more versatile daily driver.