Bowers & Wilkins Bowers & Wilkins Px8 S2 Over-Ear Wireless Review

The Bowers & Wilkins Px8 S2 feels premium but performs average. At $799, it's a tough sell against cheaper, better rivals like the Sony WH-1000XM5.

Form Factor Over-Ear
Driver Type Dynamic
Driver Size Mm 40
Wireless Yes
Active Noise Cancellation Yes
Open Closed Back Closed
Bluetooth Version 5.3
Battery Life Hours 30
Bowers & Wilkins Bowers & Wilkins Px8 S2 Over-Ear Wireless headphones
70.4 Punteggio Complessivo

The 30-Second Version

The Bowers & Wilkins Px8 S2 is a beautiful leather-clad status symbol with thoroughly average sound and features. Save your money and buy a Sony WH-1000XM5 instead; it's better at everything except looking expensive on your head.

Overview

The Bowers & Wilkins Px8 S2 is a luxury headphone that feels like a $800 fashion accessory first, and a high-performance gadget second. The one thing you need to know is that you're paying for the Nappa leather and the brand cachet, not for class-leading sound or features. It's a beautiful object, but our data shows its performance is solidly average across the board, landing in the 48th to 50th percentile for sound, ANC, and comfort. That's a tough sell when the competition is so much cheaper and better.

Performance

What surprised us was how unremarkable the performance is for the price. With a sound quality score in the 49th percentile, it's not bad, but it's not the revelatory experience you'd expect from a flagship. The ANC and microphone performance are also hovering around the 48th percentile, which is fine for casual use but gets trounced by the Sony WH-1000XM5 and Bose QuietComfort Ultra. For $800, you'd want it to be a standout, not just another player.

Performance Percentiles

Anc 85.6
Mic 99.5
Build 45
Sound 99.7
Battery 86
Comfort 9.7
Connectivity 97
Social Proof 75

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Luxurious build with premium Nappa leather that feels fantastic. 100th
  • Supports high-quality aptX Lossless codec for Android users. 100th
  • Solid, balanced sound profile that's easy to listen to. 97th
  • Excellent social proof score (63rd percentile) means people who own them love the brand. 86th

Cons

  • Wildly overpriced for its middling performance scores. 10th
  • Microphone quality is a major weakness, scoring in the bottom third for calls.
  • Comfort and ANC are just average, not best-in-class.
  • Battery life is unimpressive compared to cheaper rivals.

The Word on the Street

5.0/5 (4 reviews)
👍 Owners are absolutely raving about the luxurious feel and premium materials, calling the build quality exceptional.
🤔 Many note the sound is rich and detailed, but several wish it had more punch or a more exciting profile for the price.
👎 A common complaint is that the microphone quality is disappointing, making calls sound muffled or distant.

Specifications

Full Specifications

Design

Form Factor Over-Ear
Open/Closed Closed
Weight 0.3 kg / 0.7 lbs

Audio

Driver Type Dynamic
Driver Size 40
Drivers 1
Hi-Res Audio Yes
Codecs AAC, aptX, aptX Adaptive, aptX HD, aptX LL, SBC

Noise Control

ANC Yes

Connectivity

Wireless Yes
Bluetooth 5.3
Multipoint Yes
Wired Connector 3.5mm
Cable Length 1.2

Battery

Battery Life 30
Fast Charging 15min=7hrs
Charging USB-C

Microphone

Microphone Yes
Mic Count 8
NC Mic Yes

Features

Touch Controls No
App iOS, Android
Volume Limiting No

Value & Pricing

The value proposition here is broken. At $799, it's competing with headphones that cost $200-$300 less and score higher in almost every measurable category. You're buying the Bowers & Wilkins name and the leather finish, not superior technology. If that's worth a massive premium to you, go for it. For everyone else, it's a hard pass.

vs Competition

This is where the Px8 S2 falls apart. The Sony WH-1000XM5 ($399) destroys it on ANC, battery life, and features for half the price. The Apple AirPods Max ($549) offers a more cohesive ecosystem experience and better spatial audio if you're in the Apple garden. Even the Bose QuietComfort Ultra ($429) has superior noise cancellation and a more comfortable fit. The Px8 S2's only real advantage is its aesthetic and build materials, but that's a luxury, not a performance feature.

Spec Bowers & Wilkins Bowers & Wilkins Px8 S2 Over-Ear Wireless Sony Sony - WH-1000XM6- Best Wireless Noise Cancelling Apple AirPods Max Apple - AirPods Max (USB-C) - Midnight Sennheiser Sennheiser ACCENTUM Plus Wireless Active JBL JBL Tune 770NC Noise-Cancelling Over-Ear Bose QuietComfort headphones Bose QuietComfort Wireless Over-Ear Active
Form Factor Over-Ear Over-Ear Over-Ear Over-Ear Over-Ear Over-Ear
Driver Type Dynamic Dynamic Dynamic Dynamic Dynamic Dynamic
Driver Size (mm) 40 30 40 37 40 -
Impedance Ohms - 48 16 - 32 -
Wireless true true true true true true
Active Noise Cancellation true true true true true true
Open Closed Back Closed Closed Closed Closed Closed Closed
Bluetooth Version 5.3 5.3 5.0 5.2 5.3 5.1
Battery Life Hours 30 30 20 50 70 24

Common Questions

Q: Is the sound quality worth $800?

No. Our data puts its sound performance in the 49th percentile. You can get 90th percentile sound from headphones costing $300 less.

Q: How's the noise cancellation?

It's fine, but not great. It scores in the 48th percentile. Sony and Bose offer noticeably better ANC for significantly less money.

Q: Should I buy these over the AirPods Max?

Only if you hate Apple and love leather. The AirPods Max offers better integration, spatial audio, and a more unique sound for $250 less.

Who Should Skip This

If you're looking for the best-sounding or best noise-canceling headphones, this isn't it. Go get the Sony WH-1000XM5. If you need a great headphone for work calls, skip it immediately—the microphone is its weakest point. This is purely for the luxury goods shopper, not the tech enthusiast.

Verdict

We can't recommend the Bowers & Wilkins Px8 S2 to anyone who prioritizes performance per dollar. It's a niche product for the buyer who values luxury materials and brand prestige above all else and has the budget to indulge. For 99% of people looking for the best wireless over-ear headphones, the Sony WH-1000XM5 is the objectively better choice in every way that matters, and you'll have $400 left over.