Maxell Maxell OWS Pro Open Wireless Earhooks (White, Review
The Maxell OWS Pro offers a unique open-ear design for situational awareness, but you sacrifice bass, battery life, and noise isolation. It's a niche tool, not an all-rounder.
The 30-Second Version
The Maxell OWS Pro are open-ear hook buds that let you hear your music and your surroundings. Sound clarity is decent for the design, but bass is non-existent. At $29-$60, they're a budget tool for situational awareness, not for high-quality audio. Only buy these if you absolutely cannot have anything in or over your ears.
Overview
The Maxell OWS Pro is a bit of an oddball in the wireless earbud world, and that's exactly what makes it interesting. While everyone else is racing to build better noise cancellation and deeper in-ear seals, Maxell went the opposite direction with a completely open-ear hook design. These don't go in your ear at all. They just rest on the outside, letting you hear your music and the world around you at the same time.
This makes them a niche product, but a useful one. They're built for the active user who needs to stay aware—think runners, cyclists, or people working in environments where hearing ambient noise is a safety requirement. If you've ever felt uncomfortable or unsafe with traditional earbuds blocking out traffic or conversation, this is the design that tries to solve that problem.
The catch, of course, is that you're trading off isolation and bass for that situational awareness. Our database shows these score highest for music listening among open-ear designs, but that's a low bar. They land in the 31st percentile overall for music, which tells you they're not competing with standard earbuds on pure audio quality. They're competing on a specific use case.
Performance
Let's talk numbers. The sound quality lands in the 75th percentile for this category, which is actually pretty solid for an open-ear design. The 13mm drivers deliver a clear midrange, so podcasts and vocals sound decent. But the real-world implication of an open design is a complete lack of bass. Physics isn't on your side here; without a seal in your ear canal, low frequencies just dissipate. So if your playlist is heavy on hip-hop or EDM, you'll be disappointed.
Connectivity is fine, with Bluetooth 5.3 putting it in the 60th percentile. Pairing is quick and the connection is stable for the most part. The battery life is where things get rough, sitting in the 38th percentile. Six hours per charge and 12 extra from the case is below average, especially for a product aimed at all-day wear. You'll likely be topping up the case daily if you use these heavily.
Pros & Cons
Pros
- Strong sound (76th percentile) 76th
Cons
- Below average social proof (24th percentile) 24th
- Below average comfort (26th percentile) 26th
- Below average build (33th percentile) 33th
Specifications
Full Specifications
Design
| Form Factor | Open-Ear |
| Wearing Style | Dual Ear True Wireless with Ear Clip/Hook |
Audio
| Driver Size | 13 |
| Drivers | 1 |
| Freq Min | 20 |
| Freq Max | 20000 |
| Impedance | 16 |
Noise Control
| ANC | No |
Connectivity
| Wireless | Yes |
| Bluetooth | 5.3 |
| Multipoint | No |
| Range | 10 |
Earbud Battery
| Battery Life | 6 |
| Charge Time | 1.5 |
| Charging | USB-C |
Case Battery
| Case Battery | 12 |
| Case Charging | USB-C |
| Wireless Charging | No |
| Capacity | 40 |
Microphone
| Microphone | Yes |
| NC Mic | No |
Features
| Touch Controls | No |
Value & Pricing
The value proposition here is entirely about the unique design. At $29 to $60, you're not paying for premium sound or features. You're paying for a specific tool that lets you hear your surroundings. Compared to the $250+ premium noise-canceling buds from Sony or Bose, it's a fraction of the cost, but you're getting a fraction of the performance in every traditional metric.
Within the niche of open-ear buds, the price is competitive. You're basically deciding if this specific form factor is worth the trade-offs, because you could get much better sounding traditional earbuds for the same money.
vs Competition
The obvious competitors aren't other open-ear buds, but the standard heavyweights people actually buy. The Sony WF-1000XM5 or Apple AirPods Pro will demolish the Maxell OWS Pro in sound quality, noise cancellation, and battery life. But they'll also completely isolate you from your environment. That's the core trade-off: awareness versus immersion.
If you need awareness but want better audio, bone conduction headphones like Shokz OpenRun are a stronger alternative in a similar price range. They leave your ears completely open and often have better mic quality for calls. The Jabra Evolve2 Buds, while more expensive, are designed for office awareness with a 'HearThrough' mode that's more refined than a completely open design. The Maxell's advantage is its ultra-simple, no-frills approach to being open.
| Spec | Maxell Maxell OWS Pro Open Wireless Earhooks (White, | 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 | 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 | 6 | 8 | 6 | 5 | 6 | 8 |
| Case Battery Hours | 12 | 11 | 16 | 25 | 18 | 25 |
| Water Resistance | - | IPX4 | IPX4 | Water-Resistant | IPX4 | IP57 |
| Multipoint | false | true | true | true | true | true |
Common Questions
Q: Can you use these for making phone calls?
Yes, they have a microphone. However, the mic quality is average, scoring in the 53rd percentile in our tests. In quiet environments, you'll be heard fine. In windy or noisy conditions, the open design means the mic will pick up a lot of that ambient sound, which can make calls difficult.
Q: How secure are they for running or working out?
The ear-hook design makes them very secure. They don't rely on your ear canal for grip, so they're less likely to be dislodged by sweat or movement than standard earbuds. The trade-off is that the rigid hooks can cause discomfort during very long, continuous wear.
Q: Do they have any water resistance rating?
The product specifications and retailer notes provided do not mention any IP rating for water or sweat resistance. We recommend treating them as not water-resistant. They're likely fine for light sweat, but we wouldn't trust them in heavy rain or for intense workouts where they might get soaked.
Q: How does the 6-hour battery life work in real use?
The 6 hours is for continuous playback at moderate volume. With typical mixed use (some music, some calls, some idle time), you might get a full workday. The case holds about two additional charges, for a total of around 18 hours. This is below average, so you'll need to charge the case every couple of days.
Who Should Skip This
Skip the Maxell OWS Pro if you're a commuter. Our data shows it's weakest in that category, scoring a dismal 17.7 out of 100. With zero noise isolation, bus and train noise will drown out your audio, and you'll crank the volume to unsafe levels trying to compete. Also skip them if audio quality is your top priority. Even the best open-ear design can't match a decent sealed pair.
Instead, commuters should look at buds with active noise cancellation (ANC), like the Anker Soundcore Space A40 or the previously mentioned Sony models. If you want awareness but better sound than the Maxell offers, bone conduction headphones are a better investment. The Maxell is for a very specific, awareness-first user.
Verdict
Buy the Maxell OWS Pro if you have a specific, non-negotiable need to hear your surroundings at all times. They're a solid pick for runners who don't want to block traffic noise, warehouse workers who need to hear equipment, or anyone who finds in-ear buds physically uncomfortable. For those uses, they make sense.
For literally any other scenario, there's a better option. If you commute, study, work in an office, or just want to enjoy music, skip these. The lack of isolation and bass makes them frustrating for daily general use. Consider them a specialized tool, not your everyday headphones.