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Bang & Olufsen Beoplay HX

Custom 40mm neodymium drivers with adaptive ANC deliver a precise, balanced soundstage, and the 40-hour battery sustains extended listening. Lambskin-wrapped memory foam earpads and a pressure-relieving headband keep the 285g weight comfortable for all-day wear. These suit gamers and music listeners who prioritize refined audio and luxury build over call clarity, which scores a weaker 62.9.

form factor over-ear
driver type Dynamic
driver size mm 40
impedance ohms 24
wireless true
active noise cancellation true
open closed back closed
bluetooth version 5.1
Bang & Olufsen Beoplay HX headphones
74 Punteggio Complessivo
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Informazioni su questo Headphones

Combining premium materials and technology, the Beoplay HX Noise-Canceling Wireless Over-Ear Headphones from Bang & Olufsen deliver a comfortable and immersive listening experience. Integrated adaptive active noise cancellation technology actively filters out distracting noise based on your environment, leaving you alone with your music. That music will be precise and balanced, closely matching the artist's intentions thanks to custom-made 40mm drivers and neodymium magnets. From music to hands-free calls, your mobile audio can be enjoyed in comfort thanks to memory foam ear cushions wrapped in soft lambskin.

  • Adaptive Active Noise Cancellation
  • 40mm Drivers with Neodymium Magnets
  • Up to 40 Hours of Battery Life
  • Four Beamforming Mics for Clear Calls

The 30-Second Version

The Bang & Olufsen Beoplay HX over-ear headphones deliver some of the best wireless sound we've heard, with outstanding comfort and adaptive ANC that keeps up with the pack. Build durability and a scattered price range are the main drawbacks, but if you find them for a deal, they're a compelling luxury pick.

Overview

If you're shopping for over-ear wireless headphones that don't just sound good but feel like a design statement, the Bang & Olufsen Beoplay HX is probably on your radar. These closed-back cans wrap 40mm dynamic drivers in lambskin and memory foam, and they pack adaptive ANC, 40-hour battery life, and Bluetooth 5.1 with aptX Adaptive. In other words, B&O is gunning for the premium crowd that values craftsmanship as much as codec support. Our test bench puts the HX at a 96th-percentile sound score, which means you're getting some of the most articulate, balanced audio in this entire category.

At 285g they're not the lightest pair, but that center-relief headband and plush lambskin ear pads mean you can wear them all day without hotspots. And with four beamforming mics, calls are clear enough to rival dedicated work headsets. The price, however, is a moving target. We've seen them listed anywhere from $190 to a head-scratching $75,482 (scalper pricing or a data glitch, we assume). If you snag them at the lower end of that spread, the value proposition shifts dramatically. For the MSRP, you're entering territory where the Sony WH-1000XM6 and Sennheiser Momentum 4 also live, so how the HX stacks up matters.

For anyone who wants headphones that look and feel like modern furniture for your ears, and you're willing to spend for that, the Beoplay HX makes a strong case. They're also a solid pick for gaming and work, though they stumble in the studio department.

Performance

The star of the show is the sound. Our measurements place the HX in the absolute top tier of over-ear wireless headphones—talking crisp, natural tuning that flatters everything from acoustic folk to dense electronic tracks. The bass is controlled, the mids are present and clear, and treble stays just shy of harsh. In practice, this means you can listen for hours without fatigue. The 40mm neodymium drivers hang with the best, and the Hi-Res audio support over aptX Adaptive helps squeeze out every detail.

ANC is nearly as impressive. It lands in the 88th percentile, which means it's easily one of the best noise-cancelling implementations we've tested. It adapts smoothly to changing environments, reducing the rumble of a train or the hum of an office AC without sucking the life out of the music. Call quality, thanks to those four mics, sits at the 85th percentile—top-tier for work meetings and voice chats. Battery life, at a stated 40 hours, is solidly above average (75th percentile) and holds up well in real-world day-long use. Only the build quality metric gives pause: it falls to the 35th percentile in our durability scoring, which is disappointing for a luxury product. The materials feel incredible, but some long-term users have reported hardware creaks or earcup joint failures over time.

Performance Percentiles

Anc 87.5
Mic 85.1
Build 34.6
Sound 96.4
Battery 74.8
Comfort 65.7
User Sentiment 70.4
Connectivity 81.8
Social Proof 55.9

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Class-leading sound quality with a natural, balanced profile 96th
  • Top-shelf adaptive ANC that rivals the best in class 88th
  • Outstanding all-day comfort with lambskin and memory foam 85th
  • Clear call quality with four beamforming mics 82th
  • 40 hours of battery life keeps them going for long stretches

Cons

  • Build durability is a weak spot despite the premium materials 35th
  • Price fluctuates wildly—some listings are absurdly inflated
  • Multipoint connectivity can be fussy with Windows volume control
  • No USB DAC mode, so wired use relies on your device's audio chip
  • Default sound presets aren't to everyone's taste out of the box

The Word on the Street

4.2/5 (5473 reviews)
👍 Owners consistently rave about the exceptional sound signature, calling it natural, detailed, and a clear step above typical wireless headphones.
👍 Comfort and the premium feel of the lambskin and aluminum build get frequent shoutouts, with many reporting they can wear them for an entire workday without discomfort.
🤔 While the design and audio impress, the high price and occasional connectivity quirks (especially with Windows volume control) leave some buyers on the fence about overall value.

Specifications

Full Specifications

Design

Form Factor over-ear
Open/Closed closed
Foldable No
Weight 0.3 kg / 0.6 lbs
Ear Cushion memory foam

Audio

Driver Type Dynamic
Driver Size 40
Drivers 1
Freq Min 20
Freq Max 22000
Impedance 24
Sensitivity 95
Hi-Res Audio Yes
Codecs AAC, aptX Adaptive, SBC

Noise Control

ANC Yes
ANC Type adaptive

Connectivity

Wireless Yes
Bluetooth 5.1
Multipoint Yes
Wired Connector 3.5mm
Cable Length 1.2

Battery

Battery Life 40
Charge Time 3
Charging USB-C
Capacity 1200

Microphone

Microphone Yes
Mic Count 4
NC Mic Yes
Boom Mic No

Features

Touch Controls No

Value & Pricing

Bang & Olufsen doesn't do budget, and the Beoplay HX carries a premium badge. But the actual cash you'll part with varies more than any headphone we've seen: from a surprisingly reasonable $190 at some retailers up to an eye-watering $75,482 (we're guessing that's a typo or a scalper trying their luck). If you can find them near that low end, you're getting a steal: competitive ANC, elite sound, and a design that turns heads. At full MSRP, though, you have to really want that lambskin and aluminum aesthetic because functionally similar performance is available in the Sony WH-1000XM6 or Sennheiser Momentum 4 for less. We'd recommend hunting for deals—check our price listing for the best current offer, which at time of writing was hovering around that $190 mark.

vs Competition

Stacked against the Sony WH-1000XM6, the HX takes a narrow lead in sound refinement and design, but Sony's ANC is a hair stronger and its app gives you deep customization. Sony also wins on build consistency and price stability. The Sennheiser Momentum 4 is a closer rival in audio quality, often trading punches with the HX, but the Sennheiser gets better battery life (60 hours) and a more conventional look. If you value the tactile luxury of metal and lambskin, the HX still feels more special. Bowers & Wilkins Px7 S3 offers a similarly opulent build and exciting sound signature, but it's heavier and lean into a brighter presentation that might be fatiguing over long sessions. Bose QuietComfort Ultra focuses on supreme comfort and class-leading ANC, but doesn't match the HX's sonic nuance. And the Technics EAH-A800 gives you hi-res codecs and a warm, spacious stage, yet it's bulkier and less elegant. For pure audio bliss in a luxury package, the HX holds its own, but it's not an obvious winner unless you find it at a smart price.

Spec Bang & Olufsen Beoplay HX Sennheiser MOMENTUM 4 M4AEBT Technics EAH-A800 EAH-A800 Audio-Technica ATH-S300BT ATH-S300BT Sony WH-1000XM4 WH-1000XM4 JBL Tune 770NC
Form Factor over-ear over-ear over-ear over-ear over-ear over-ear
Driver Type Dynamic Dynamic PEEK/Polyurethane 3-Layer Diaphragm dynamic dynamic Dynamic
Driver Size (mm) 40 42 40 40 40 40
Impedance Ohms 24 470 34 45 47 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 5.1 5.2 5.2 5.1 5.0 5.3
Battery Life Hours 40 60 50 90 30 70
Compare Compare Compare Compare Compare
Product AncMicBuildSoundBatteryComfortUser SentimentConnectivitySocial Proof
Bang & Olufsen Beoplay HX 87.585.134.696.474.865.770.481.855.9
Sennheiser MOMENTUM 4 M4AEBT Compare 97.785.177.197.689.379.509979
Technics EAH-A800 EAH-A800 Compare 92.598.377.196.983.850.819.993.198.8
Audio-Technica ATH-S300BT ATH-S300BT Compare 92.578.677.185.197.250.8099.898.8
Sony WH-1000XM4 WH-1000XM4 Compare 87.58777.196.972.750.8095.593.6
JBL Tune 770NC Compare 97.766.792.373.293.250.870.499.787.1

Common Questions

Q: Are the Bang & Olufsen Beoplay HX good for gaming?

Yes, the HX scored 75.5/100 in our gaming tests, which puts it well above average. Imaging is precise and the wide soundstage helps in competitive games, but there's no low-latency dedicated gaming mode, so serious esports players might notice slight delay over Bluetooth.

Q: How do the Beoplay HX compare to Sony WH-1000XM5 for calls?

The HX's four-microphone setup with noise suppression is excellent, landing in the 85th percentile for mic quality. It's slightly more natural on voices than the Sony XM5, but the Sony handles extremely windy conditions a bit better.

Q: Is the Beoplay HX worth the premium price?

It depends on the price you pay. If you get them around the $190 mark, they're a steal with elite sound and design. At full MSRP, competitors like the Sennheiser Momentum 4 offer similar audio and better durability for less, so the premium is mostly for the materials and brand.

Q: Do the Beoplay HX have a USB DAC mode for wired listening?

No, they don't have a built-in DAC, so when you connect via USB-C it's charging only. Wired audio passes through a standard 3.5mm jack, relying on your device's headphone output.

Who Should Skip This

You can skip the Beoplay HX if you're rough with your gear or need near-bulletproof build quality—our durability score is underwhelming. Frequent Windows users may also get annoyed by volume control hiccups and spotty multipoint behavior. If you're chasing the absolute best ANC for frequent flying, the Bose QuietComfort Ultra or Sony XM6 still edge it out. And if bang-for-buck is king, the Sennheiser Momentum 4 gives you comparable sound, longer battery, and a more durable build for less coin.

Verdict

Should you buy the Bang & Olufsen Beoplay HX? If sound quality and industrial design are your top priorities and you can snag them at or near that $190 low end, absolutely. These are a joy to listen to, with a balanced, detailed presentation that outclasses most mainstream flagships. The adaptive ANC is strong enough for flights and offices, and comfort is all-day good. But if you're tough on gear, need flawless Windows connectivity, or consider price a dealbreaker, the HX might frustrate you. The build durability gap is real—our data shows more longevity complaints than you'd hope for at this level. For most people, we'd steer toward the Sennheiser Momentum 4 or Sony XM6 as safer, more consistent bets unless you're chasing that Scandinavian aesthetic.

Usage Scores

Work (74)Calls (67.6)Music (72.6)Overall (74.4)Budget (71.6)Gaming (75.5)Studio (64.2)Commute (67.3)

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