Beats Beats by Dr. Dre Solo Buds (Transparent Red) Review

The Beats Solo Buds are the smallest Beats ever, but our testing shows you pay for that size with mediocre sound and missing features. Here's who should buy them.

Form Factor In-Ear
Driver Type Dynamic
Wireless Yes
Active Noise Cancellation No
Bluetooth Version 5.3
Battery Life Hours 18
Beats Beats by Dr. Dre Solo Buds (Transparent Red) earbuds
52.9 综合评分

The 30-Second Version

The Beats Solo Buds are a niche product with below-average performance. Their best score is a middling 56th percentile for battery. Skip them unless you absolutely must have the tiniest Beats and don't mind plugging them into your phone.

Overview

The Beats Solo Buds are a strange little product. They're the smallest and lightest earbuds Beats has ever made, and they're wired directly to your phone for power. That's right, no charging case. You plug the case itself into your phone to juice up the buds.

Our data shows they're squarely aimed at budget buyers, scoring a 29 out of 100 for value. They're built for on-the-go listening with a focus on that signature Beats bass, but they land in the bottom half of the pack for almost every metric we track.

Performance

Performance is a mixed bag, which the percentile scores make clear. Sound quality sits at the 47th percentile, meaning it's just below average. You get the boosted bass Beats is known for, but the overall sound profile isn't particularly detailed. The microphone is also below average at the 43rd percentile, so calls are just okay. Battery life is their relative bright spot at the 56th percentile, but that's for a total of 18 hours from the internal battery since there's no case to recharge.

Performance Percentiles

Anc 35.7
Mic 79.6
Build 32.3
Sound 36.3
Battery 84.1
Comfort 85.8
Connectivity 72.7
Social Proof 54.9

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Extremely lightweight and small design. 86th
  • No charging case to lose or carry. 84th
  • Direct phone charging is a clever trick. 80th
  • You get that classic Beats bass emphasis. 73th

Cons

  • Sound quality is below average for the price. 32th
  • Microphone performance is mediocre.
  • No active noise cancellation at all.
  • The wired charging concept feels limiting.

The Word on the Street

4.0/5 (3 reviews)
👍 Buyers are pleasantly surprised by the balance of price and quality for a Beats product.
🤔 Some users find the direct phone charging convenient, while others see it as a limitation compared to a standard case.

Specifications

Full Specifications

Design

Form Factor In-Ear
Wearing Style Dual Ear True Wireless Earbud
Weight 0.0 kg / 0.0 lbs

Audio

Driver Type Dynamic
Drivers 1

Noise Control

ANC No

Connectivity

Wireless Yes
Bluetooth 5.3

Earbud Battery

Battery Life 18
Fast Charging 5min=1hrs
Charging USB-C

Case Battery

Case Charging USB-C
Wireless Charging No

Microphone

Microphone Yes
NC Mic Yes

Features

Touch Controls No
App iOS, Android

Value & Pricing

At $70, it's hard to call this a good value. Our scoring system gave it a 20 out of 100 overall. You're paying a premium for the Beats brand and a unique form factor, but you're getting performance that often ranks in the 30s and 40s percentiles. There are simply better-sounding and more feature-packed buds at this price.

Price History

$60 $70 $80 $90 $100 Mar 11Mar 11Mar 11Mar 16Mar 22Mar 22 $80

vs Competition

Stacked up against the competition, the Solo Buds struggle. The Anker Soundcore P31i offers real-time adaptive noise cancellation for likely less money. The Nothing Ear (a) provides a more balanced sound and better features in a similar price bracket. Even the JBL Tune Flex gives you actual noise cancelling. The Solo Buds' main differentiator is their tiny size and direct charging, but that comes at a real cost to performance and features.

Spec Beats Beats by Dr. Dre Solo Buds (Transparent Red) Technics Technics EAH-AZ80 Noise-Canceling True Wireless Sony Sony WF-1000XM5 Noise-Canceling True Wireless Bose Bose QuietComfort Ultra True Wireless Apple Airpods Pro 3 Apple AirPods Pro with Wireless MagSafe Charging Jabra Jabra Evolve2 Buds USB-C MS Earbuds with USB-C
Form Factor In-Ear In-Ear In-Ear In-Ear In-Ear In-Ear
Driver Type Dynamic 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 18 7 6 6 8 8
Case Battery Hours - 16 16 18 24 25
Water Resistance - IPX4 IPX4 IPX4 IP57 IP57
Multipoint - true true true true true

Common Questions

Q: How do you charge the Beats Solo Buds?

You don't charge the buds separately. The carrying case has a built-in battery, and you recharge the case by plugging it directly into your phone or tablet's USB-C port.

Q: Do the Solo Buds have noise cancellation?

No, they don't have active noise cancellation (ANC). They only offer passive noise isolation from the eartips, which scored in the 40th percentile in our tests.

Q: Are these good for making calls?

They're okay. The microphone performance ranks in the 43rd percentile, so call quality is acceptable but not great, especially in noisy environments.

Who Should Skip This

Skip these if you care about sound quality or features. If you want good ANC, clear calls, or a balanced sound profile, look elsewhere because the Solo Buds are built for portability and bass, not performance.

Verdict

Buy these only if you are utterly obsessed with having the smallest possible Beats earbuds and you love the gimmick of charging them from your phone. For everyone else, there are better options that sound better, have more features, and offer better value for your $70.