Jabra Elite 75t Jabra Elite 75t Voice Assistant Enabled True Review
The Jabra Elite 75t offer fantastic sound and battery life, but our analysis reveals a fatal flaw: the microphone is awful, and quality control is a gamble. At $143, you can do better.
The 30-Second Version
Great sound, terrible mic, and a gamble on reliability. For $143, you can do a lot better than these inconsistent performers.
Overview
The Jabra Elite 75t are a weird paradox. They sound fantastic, fit like a dream, and last forever, but they're also a bit of a gamble. The one thing you need to know is this: if you get a good pair, you'll love them. But our database shows a real split in buyer experiences, and the call quality is genuinely bad. For music and battery life, they're top-tier. For everything else, you're taking a chance.
Performance
What surprised us was just how good the battery life and comfort scores are. These things land in the 96th percentile for both, which is wild for a product at this price. You really can get a full day of listening without a second thought, and they're so small they basically disappear in your ears. The ANC is no joke either, sitting at the 89th percentile. It's not Bose or Sony level, but it's way better than you'd expect.
Pros & Cons
Pros
- The sound quality is genuinely excellent, with a rich, bass-forward profile you can tweak in the app. 98th
- Battery life is a beast. 7.5 hours per charge and 28 total with the case puts most competitors to shame. 94th
- They're incredibly comfortable and secure. The 96th percentile comfort score isn't a fluke. 94th
- The active noise cancellation punches well above its weight for the price. 83th
Cons
- The microphone is terrible. It's in the 38th percentile, and our call score of 52.8/100 confirms it. People will struggle to hear you.
- Build quality feels cheap for the price, landing in the 42nd percentile. The case and buds don't inspire confidence.
- There's a noticeable quality control issue. Too many buyers report one bud failing or receiving used/defective units.
- They're expensive for what you get, especially when you consider the mic and build flaws.
The Word on the Street
Specifications
Full Specifications
Design
| Form Factor | True Wireless |
| Weight | 0.0 kg / 0.0 lbs |
Audio
| Driver Type | 6mm |
| Driver Size | 6 |
| Drivers | 6 |
| Freq Min | 20 |
| Freq Max | 20000 |
| Impedance | 3 |
| Codecs | Jabra Elite 75t is ideal for those who want to enjoy great sounding calls and music in a true wireless form factor that's smaller, and tested for secure fit. |
Noise Control
| ANC | Yes |
Connectivity
| Wireless | Yes |
| Bluetooth | 5 |
| Wired Connector | Jabra Elite 75t Voice Assistant Enabled True Wirel |
Earbud Battery
| Battery Life | 28 |
Case Battery
| Case Battery | 20.5 |
Microphone
| Microphone | Yes |
Value & Pricing
At $143, it's a tough sell. You're paying near-premium prices for a product with budget-tier microphone performance and spotty reliability. If your top priorities are sound, comfort, and battery life, and you never take calls, there's value here. For everyone else, your money goes further elsewhere.
vs Competition
This is a crowded field. The Sony WF-1000XM5 and Bose QuietComfort Earbuds are the kings of ANC and sound, but they cost a lot more. The real competition is from Anker's Soundcore line, like the Liberty 4 NC. For half the price of the Jabras, you get 90% of the sound quality, solid ANC, and way better call performance. The Nothing Ear (a) is another strong contender with a unique design and good all-around performance for less money. The Jabras win on comfort and battery, but they lose on reliability and mic quality.
| Spec | Jabra Elite 75t Jabra Elite 75t Voice Assistant Enabled True | Apple AirPods 4 Active Noise Cancellation Apple - AirPods 4 with Active Noise Cancellation - | Sony Sony - WF-1000XM6 Best Truly Wireless Noise | Bose Bose QuietComfort Ultra True Wireless | Technics Technics - Premium HiFi True Wireless Earbuds with | Jabra Jabra - Evolve2 Earset - Stereo - USB Type C - |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Form Factor | True Wireless | True Wireless | True Wireless | In-Ear | In-Ear | In-Ear |
| Driver Type | 6mm | Dynamic | Dynamic | Dynamic | Dynamic | Dynamic |
| Wireless | true | true | true | true | true | true |
| Active Noise Cancellation | true | true | true | true | true | true |
| Bluetooth Version | 5.0 | 5.3 | 5.3 | 5.3 | 5.3 | 5.2 |
| Battery Life Hours | 28 | 5 | 12 | 6 | 7 | 8 |
| Case Battery Hours | 20.5 | 25 | 12 | 18 | 16 | 25 |
| Water Resistance | - | Water-Resistant | IPX4 | IPX4 | Water-Resistant | IP57 |
| Multipoint | - | true | true | true | true | true |
Common Questions
Q: Is the call quality really that bad?
Yes. Our data puts the mic performance in the bottom 40%, and the call score is a dismal 52.8/100. People will ask you to repeat yourself, especially outdoors.
Q: How's the battery life in real use?
It's legitimately great. You'll easily get over 7 hours with ANC on, and the case gives you a total of 28. That's a top-tier result.
Q: Should I be worried about one earbud failing?
The risk seems higher than it should be. Multiple customer reviews mention this exact issue, so it's a valid concern, not just bad luck.
Who Should Skip This
If you need to take calls regularly, skip these immediately. The microphone is a dealbreaker. Also, if you hate playing quality control lottery with your gadgets, look elsewhere. Go get the Anker Soundcore Liberty 4 NC for better call quality and similar performance at a lower price, or stretch your budget for the Sony WF-1000XM5 if you want the best.
Verdict
We can't give a full-throated recommendation. The Elite 75t have too many fundamental flaws for a product at this price point. The awful microphone alone is a dealbreaker for anyone who needs to take calls. Combine that with the quality control horror stories, and it's just not worth the risk. There are better, more reliable all-rounders for the same money or less. Only consider these if you find them heavily discounted and you're a music-only listener who prizes battery life above all else.