Sony Sony LinkBuds Clip True Wireless Noise-Canceling Review

The Sony LinkBuds Clip offer a clever but pricey solution for staying aware of your surroundings. They're great for runners and commuters, but their short battery life and niche fit mean they aren't for everyone.

Form Factor Open-Ear
Driver Type Dynamic
Wireless Yes
Active Noise Cancellation Yes
Bluetooth Version 5.3
Battery Life Hours 4
Case Battery Hours 28
Water Resistance IPX4
Multipoint Yes
Sony Sony LinkBuds Clip True Wireless Noise-Canceling earbuds
82.4 ओवरऑल स्कोर

The 30-Second Version

The Sony LinkBuds Clip are premium open-ear true wireless earbuds designed for situational awareness. They feature a unique clip design, adaptive noise cancellation, and excellent connectivity, but their 4-hour battery life and niche fit limit their appeal. They're best for active users who must hear their surroundings.

Overview

If you're looking for true wireless earbuds that don't seal you off from the world, the Sony LinkBuds Clip are a fascinating option. They're open-ear earbuds, which means they sit just outside your ear canal, letting you hear your music and your surroundings at the same time. They're designed for people who are always on the move, whether that's commuting, traveling, or working out, and they come with a unique ear clip design for a secure fit. At around $230, they're a premium choice in the open-ear category, competing directly with other high-end buds from Sony, Bose, and Apple.

Sony packs a lot into this small package: AI-powered adaptive noise canceling (which is a bit of a trick for an open design), Bluetooth 5.3 with multipoint connectivity, and a total of 28 hours of battery life with the case. The idea is to give you the convenience and tech of premium earbuds without the isolation. It's a specific solution for a specific problem, and it's one of the few open-ear models that even attempts to include active noise cancellation.

Performance

How do open-ear earbuds with ANC actually sound? Surprisingly well, according to our data. The sound quality scores in the 83rd percentile, which is solid for this unconventional design. The 10mm drivers deliver a clear and balanced audio profile, though you won't get the deep, thumping bass of a sealed in-ear model—that's just physics. The adaptive noise canceling, which lands in the 84th percentile, works to filter out consistent low-end rumbles like airplane engines or train noise, but it's not going to block out conversations or street sounds. That's by design. The microphone quality is decent for calls (79th percentile), and the Bluetooth 5.3 connectivity is top-tier, scoring in the 96th percentile for rock-solid, low-latency connections.

Performance Percentiles

Anc 84.2
Mic 80.8
Build 87.8
Sound 84.4
Battery 83.8
Comfort 57.1
Connectivity 96.2
Social Proof 23.6

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Excellent Bluetooth 5.3 connectivity with multipoint support 96th
  • Unique open-ear design maintains full situational awareness 88th
  • Includes adaptive noise canceling, rare for this style 84th
  • Secure ear clip fit is great for active use 84th
  • Good overall sound quality for an open design

Cons

  • Comfort scores only in the 55th percentile; the clip isn't for everyone 24th
  • Battery life per charge is just 4 hours, below average
  • At $230, they're a pricey experiment
  • Sound leakage can be an issue at high volumes in quiet spaces
  • ANC effectiveness is limited compared to traditional sealed earbuds

Specifications

Full Specifications

Design

Form Factor Open-Ear
Wearing Style Dual Ear True Wireless with Ear Clip/Hook
Weight 0.0 kg / 0.1 lbs

Audio

Driver Type Dynamic
Driver Size 10
Freq Min 20
Freq Max 20000
Codecs AAC, SBC

Noise Control

ANC Yes

Connectivity

Wireless Yes
Bluetooth 5.3
Profiles A2DP, AVRCP, HSP, HFP
Multipoint Yes
Range 10

Earbud Battery

Battery Life 4
Fast Charging 3min=1hrs
Charging USB-C

Case Battery

Case Battery 28
Case Charging USB-C
Wireless Charging No

Microphone

Microphone Yes
NC Mic Yes

Features

Touch Controls Yes
App iOS, Android
Volume Limiting No
Water Resistance IPX4

Value & Pricing

At $228 to $230, the LinkBuds Clip are expensive. You're paying a premium for Sony's engineering to solve the open-ear problem with features like ANC. If your primary need is situational awareness—for safety while running, or to hear announcements while traveling—this is one of the most tech-forward ways to get it. But if you just want good wireless earbuds, you can get stellar traditional models with better battery life and stronger ANC, like the Sony WF-1000XM5, for similar or even lower prices.

MX$2,999

vs Competition

The most direct competitor is another Sony: the WF-1000XM5. The XM5s are sealed, in-ear buds with class-leading ANC and sound. You buy them for immersion. You buy the LinkBuds Clip to avoid immersion. It's a fundamental choice. Compared to the Apple AirPods Pro, the Clip offers a more secure fit for sports and that open-ear awareness, but you lose the seamless Apple ecosystem integration. Against something like the Bose QuietComfort Ultra, the Clip can't match Bose's comfort or noise cancellation prowess, but it offers a fit that won't budge during a workout. The Clip carves its own niche.

Spec Sony Sony LinkBuds Clip True Wireless Noise-Canceling Technics Technics EAH-AZ80 Noise-Canceling True Wireless Apple AirPods 4 Active Noise Cancellation Apple - AirPods 4 with Active Noise Cancellation - Sony Sony WF-1000XM5 Noise-Canceling True Wireless Bose Bose QuietComfort Ultra True Wireless Sennheiser Sennheiser MOMENTUM True Wireless 4
Form Factor Open-Ear In-Ear True Wireless In-Ear In-Ear In-Ear
Driver Type Dynamic Dynamic Dynamic Sony WF-1000XM5 Noise-Canceling True Wireless In-Ear Headphones (Black) Dynamic Dynamic
Wireless true true true true true true
Active Noise Cancellation true true true true true true
Bluetooth Version 5.3 5.3 5.3 5.3 5.3 5.4
Battery Life Hours 4 7 5 6 6 7.5
Case Battery Hours 28 16 25 16 18 22.5
Water Resistance IPX4 IPX4 Water-Resistant IPX4 IPX4 IP54
Multipoint true true true true true -
Compare Compare Compare Compare Compare

Common Questions

Q: Are the Sony LinkBuds Clip good for running?

Yes, they're excellent for running. Our data shows a high fitness score (84.7/100), and the secure ear clip design means they won't fall out, while the open-ear design lets you hear traffic and stay aware of your surroundings for safety.

Q: Can other people hear your music with the LinkBuds Clip?

At moderate volumes in normal environments, sound leakage is minimal due to Sony's anti-leak tech. But if you crank the volume in a very quiet room like a library, people nearby might hear a faint sound.

Q: How does the noise cancellation work on an open earbud?

The adaptive ANC primarily targets low-frequency constant noises, like the hum of an airplane or train. It won't block voices or sudden sounds, as the open design intentionally lets those in. It's more about taking the edge off background rumble than creating silence.

Q: Is the 4-hour battery life enough?

It's below average for premium earbuds. For a long flight or workday, you'll need to use the case to recharge. The case provides a total of 28 hours, and a 3-minute quick charge gives an hour of play, which helps mitigate the short bud life.

Who Should Skip This

Skip the LinkBuds Clip if you want powerful, immersive noise cancellation for flights or focused work. Also, avoid them if you prioritize all-day battery life without recharging or if you find ear-hook styles uncomfortable. In those cases, look at traditional in-ear champions like the Sony WF-1000XM5 or the Bose QuietComfort Ultra Earbuds. If you're on a tight budget, there are more affordable open-ear bone conduction headphones that serve a similar awareness purpose.

Verdict

Should you buy the Sony LinkBuds Clip? Only if the open-ear design is a non-negotiable requirement for you. They are a brilliantly engineered solution for a specific user: the active commuter, the safety-conscious runner, or the office worker who needs to hear colleagues. The tech inside is impressive, especially the connectivity and the attempt at ANC. But for most people, traditional noise-canceling earbuds will offer better battery life, more effective noise blocking, and often more comfort for the same money. The Clip is a fantastic tool for a specific job, not a general-purpose daily driver.