The Best Open Earbuds for Everyone
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Open earbuds (AKA open-ear buds) are the hottest trend in audio right now. Thanks to a novel design that keeps your ear canals clear in any scenario, the best open earbuds let you enjoy your favorite music or media while staying naturally aware of the world.
There are a ton of options out there, so we set ourselves to task, testing every new pair we can get our hands on. Without any way to block ambient sounds, these probably can't be your everything buds, but they will let you hear everything. From affordable clip-ons to funky bone conductors, these are our favorite open earbuds for every fit and budget.
For more options, check out our extensive guides to the Best Wireless Earbuds, the Best Workout Headphones, and the Best Wireless Headphones.
Updated January 2026: We've added the Soundpeats Clip1 and Shokz OpenFit Pro.
What Exactly Are Open Earbuds and How Do They Sound?
Open earbuds are similar to regular wireless earbuds, but instead of plugging your ear canals for a good seal, they leave them open to exterior sounds for enhanced situational awareness. This means their audio performance won’t be as intimate or full-sounding as regular earbuds, particularly in the bass. They're also less versatile than buds with ambient audio features like noise canceling and transparency mode that can suppress or let in exterior sounds on demand. Their primary advantage is an unaltered path to your environment, which makes them a perfect fit when you want to naturally pepper in music and media with your environment.
When or Where Would I Use Open Earbuds?
As limited as open earbuds can be in situations like a loud office, a long flight, or a busy commute, they can slot in brilliantly when you want to multitask without missing out. They’re an obvious fit for workouts like hiking, jogging, the gym, or even biking/ebiking, where wind resistance overpowers the tiny microphones in traditional earbuds. Beyond workouts, open earbuds can be a convenient solution anytime you want to stay aurally alert, from cooking dinner while keeping tabs on the kids to sneaking in some football on your phone while the family enjoys a movie.
What About Semi-Open Earbuds?
Semi-open earbuds like Apple's standard AirPods give you a semblance of what open earbuds offer, but it’s not the same experience. I’d even argue that a semi-open fit can give you a worst-of-both-worlds scenario—you can’t get a good seal for a full representation of your music or media, and you’re not able to hear your environment as clearly as fully open earbuds or even sealed buds with transparency mode via onboard microphones. Some people who have trouble with regular ear tips swear by the standard AirPods design as a more comfortable fit, but if you want to keep in touch with the world around you, fully open earbuds are better.
What Kind of Features Can I Expect in Open Earbuds?
Open earbuds support many of the same features found in traditional earbuds like multipoint connectivity for pairing with two devices at a time over Bluetooth, sensors for auto-pause, water resistance, and even spatial audio. Most provide an app for extras like EQ or an earbuds finder, and you'll find onboard touch or push controls. Because of the limitations of their physical designs, open earbud controls are often more limited or less effective than those on traditional earbuds, but the best pairs work around these constraints for convenient control. Generally, all of the features in the open earbuds on our list should work equally well for Android and iOS devices.
One feature you shouldn't look for fully open earbuds is ANC (active noise canceling), which relies on a mix of passive sound isolation and microphones to measure your environment and reverse the polarity of exterior sound frequencies to “cancel” them out. The basic physics of the process requires a good seal to work effectively. While it’s true that some semi-open earbuds like the AirPods 4 offer noise canceling, it's generally very limited with only lower frequencies seeing any noise reduction. If you need noise canceling, you’re better off with options like the AirPods Pro, Bose’s QuietComfort Ultra, or any of our other noise-canceling favorites.
How Do We Test Open Earbuds?
We spend time listening to our favorite podcasts, music, and custom playlists both indoors and out, with a special focus on emulating the way everyone might use these headphones in the real world. With earbuds like these, we go on runs, bike rides, and take calls around town, in addition to just listening to the buds in our office spaces, at home, while making dinner, on a dog walk, etc.
Honorable Mentions
Open earbuds are becoming the hot trend in wireless audio, meaning there are plenty of good options that don't make our top list. Here are some other pairs worth considering.
Acefast Acefit Pro for $60-$125: Acefast’s Acefit Pro are more stylish than the cheaper Acefit Air above, most notably in their snazzy transparent case that shows battery life in slick LEDs when you open or close it. Otherwise, the sound quality isn’t notably better than the Air, and the buds themselves are bulkier, so they don’t fit my ears as well. These are still a solid pair of wrap-around open buds, especially since the price seems to be dropping, often available well below their $125 launch price. If you can get them for $70 or less, they're a sweet deal.
Earfun Clip for $50-$70: These affordable clip-style buds seem to have it all. You’ll get a snappy design in a compact case, a comfy fit, accessible push-button controls, and extras like multipoint pairing and a headphones finder. The package feels a step or two above the asking price, save for the sound quality. The basic performance is fine for podcasts and light listening, but leaves a lot of meat on the bone for instrumental timbres and detail, keeping this pair off our top list. Even so, at their lowest sale price of around $50, these are a good buy for basic use.
JLab Epic Open Sport for $115: JLab’s Epic Open Sport don’t have standout audio quality or a slimline design, but their mix of a comfy and stable fit and great usability makes them worth a look. Their combination of real buttons and touch pads provides convenient and customizable control on the go, still a rarity in this genre. I wish they had better call quality, and their lack of instrumental body or detail makes music rather dull, but they get the job done without breaking the bank.
Shokz OpenDots One for $200: Shokz’s first try at clip-on open earbuds is a solid if pricey effort. You'll get great battery life, a slick and sporty design that borrows from the Bose Ultra and Soundcore Aeroclip, and the ability to swap either bud for left or right (if that's something you're into). At this price, I was hoping for a more polished sound, better call quality, and more versatile controls, but features like a wireless charging case add good value. If you like the style and don’t mind paying up for swappable buds, they're worth considering.
Other Open Earbuds We’ve Tested
Soundpeats Clip1 for $70-$90: Soundpeats is one of my favorite budget brands, offering surprisingly good sound fidelity at great prices. The Clip1 are a decent effort, but the “crispy” topside misses the mark for me, leaving my favorite tunes and podcasts sounding clear, but oddly forward and inaccurate. The design looks a little cheap (especially the case), and the controls are relegated to an awkward touchpad behind your ears. I do appreciate the Clip1’s heap of features, including additions many pricier open earbuds lack, like auto-pause. They're a real stretch at $90, but sale pricing of around $60-70 could make them more enticing.
Shokz OpenFit Pro Wireless Earbuds for $250: Shokz expands its open earbuds portfolio with a new wraparound pair that, like the Lolliclip, aims to add noise cancellation to the open-ear mix. If you're thinking that keeping your ears open while silencing the exterior world is an ambitious quest, you're not wrong. Results for our reviewer were both underwhelming and uncomfortable, including some pressure with noise canceling engaged. Otherwise, the OpenFit Pro offer clear and remarkably full sound in an accessible design, but the price makes them a tough sell.
Skullcandy Push 720 for $150: I’m not quite sure what Skullcandy was aiming for in the Push 720, but they mostly miss the mark for me. The hybrid pouch/charging case adds nothing notable in its pouchiness besides being harder to pocket. The semi-open fit is more intrusive than my favorite pairs, and the buds pinch my ears over time. The sound is clear enough, but there’s an edge to the upper register that doesn’t quite jive with my ears, and surprisingly little bass. There are some cool features here, and I do like the push-button controls, but in this highly competitive segment, you can do better.
Earfun OpenJump for $80: Earfun’s OpenJump offer accessible sound and impressive waterproofing in one of the most comfortable wrap-around designs I’ve put on. It’s hard to beat their price, but they fall into one of the biggest pitfalls of open earbuds right now: awkward controls with hit-or-miss response, especially on the move. They’re still a decent value on a good sale, but only if you don't mind fumbling with the controls.
Edifier Lolliclip for $130: Edifier’s Lolliclip offer a hybrid open/semi-open design, with an AirPods-style tip looped to a backside battery. The fit feels more intrusive than my favorite open earbuds and creates too much wind resistance for biking. They're comfy enough for short-term wear and let you swap either bud for left or right. Edifier adds plenty of other extras, from multipoint pairing to health features, but the Lolliclip's marquee option, noise canceling, does more harm than good in most scenarios.






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