Early Verdict
Bose's attempt at the open-ear form factor is a great success from our early testing, The sound is incredible, the earbuds are comfortable and easy to wear, and they don't shift during runs despite a few threatening wobbles. The high price tag is a barrier though.
Pros
- +
Very little sound leakage
- +
Intuitive to wear and use
- +
Immersive Audio capabilities
Cons
- -
Premium price
- -
Uneven-feeling weight distribution
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Jump to:
- One-minute review
- Price and availability
- Design
- Features
- Performance
- Early Verdict
Bose Ultra Open Earbuds: One-minute review
The Bose Ultra Open Earbuds are Bose’s attempt at transferring its premium audio expertise and signature bassy sound into an open-ear form factor, and by any metric it succeeds. The best bone-conduction headphones and open-ear headphones generally place an emphasis on a secure fit over sound quality, as it was assumed serious audiophiles wouldn’t be looking for open-ear headphones. Instead, open-ear headphones have been positioned primarily as workout headphones, allowing you to hear traffic and pedestrians while you run or cycle, or listen to tunes during swims.
However, more and more brands are realising that, despite the fact that they’re predominantly used for workouts, open-ear form factors have other lifestyle applications, both in the office (for example, being open to collaboration and replying to a colleague while you’re listening to music or having a virtual meeting), and in the street (it turns out that being more aware of your surroundings isn’t only useful while you’re exercising).
So, we’ve now got an offering from Bose that aims dual drivers at your ears, using Bose Immersive Audio, to give you the best sound quality it can pack into headphones that don’t sit in your ear canal. The sound is very good; the best I’ve tried from air-conduction or open-ear headphones, with their immersive sound-stage technology providing spatial audio that’s ideal for home media, as well as pumping tunes during a 10K.
The experience of being in work meetings is also quite nice, and there’s no disconnect between listening to what the person on my laptop is saying while also being able to hear my office surroundings.
The design is neat, with the headphones hooking onto the side of your ear’s helix rather than over the whole ear itself, with the battery cylinder tucking behind your ear. They do feel a little wobbly thanks to the uneven weight distribution, but have so far refused to actually fall off, even during my first five-kilometer run with the buds. Full judgement will be saved for a full review, but for now… they’re very impressive, albeit a little overpriced.
Watch our video on the Bose Ultra Open Earbuds here:
@techradar♬ Funk Hip Hop Music(814197) - Pavel
Bose Ultra Open Earbuds: Price and availability
- Available now
- Priced at $299 / £299 / AU$449.95
- More expensive than AirPods Pro 2
The Bose Ultra Open Earbuds are available now, priced at $299 / £299 / AU$449.95. That’s quite the price tag: they cost the same as the Bose Quietcomfort Ultra earbuds and more than the AirPods Pro 2, and it’s clear that Bose considers the Ultra Open Earbuds a premium product just like the aforementioned buds.
In terms of sound quality and build, Bose is probably right – but given the slightly unsteady feel of the fit, the price did nothing to soothe my nerves while I was out jogging with them.
Bose Ultra Open Earbuds: Design
- Interesting, intuitive design
- Fantastic audio credentials
- Secure fit, even if it feels precarious at times
The Bose Ultra Open Earbuds have an interesting design, similar to the Huawei FreeClip, hooking into your inner ear and directly around your ear’s helix, rather than around the point in which your ear meets the side off your head like the Shokz OpenFit. The ‘battery barrel’, as our Bose rep referred to it, sits behind your ear, and each contains a tactile button which lets you switch between listening modes and adjust the volume.
The hook part contains dual drivers that project sound directly towards your ear canal and up into your inner ear, creating a more complete listening experience than bone conduction headphones are capable of. Bose calls its design OpenAudio, and it allows you to crank up the volume while offering very little sound leakage, which many other cheaper buds and open-ear headsets are very guilty of. I’ll come back to this later; but it absolutely works, and the sound quality, especially on Immersive Audio settings, is wonderful.
Snapdragon sound reportedly boosts lossless and low-latency capabilities, which sounds impressive for the open-ear headphones category which starts and ends with “how secure is the fit” for most entrants.
In regards to the fit, each bud is easy and intuitive to put on after just a few tries, although, as mentioned, they do feel a little weird, with the positioning of the battery barrel at the rear, making them wobble slightly, which occasionally feels precarious.
Bose Ultra Open Earbuds: Features
- Immersive Audio offers best-in-class open-ear listening
- Still and Motion listening modes
- Easy volume and mode-switching
In order to control the earbuds, you use the tactile buttons on the rear of the barrel. You press once to switch between immersive and stereo listening modes, and press twice and hold to toggle the volume – left to turn the volume down, right to turn it up. Easy-peasy.
The really impressive bit is Bose’s Immersive Audio soundstage, which you can access on the Bose app, and which offers Still and Motion modes. The Motion mode allows you to turn your head and move around within a soundstage, creating the impression that sound is coming from a particular direction.A Bose representative talking me through the functionality and it’s a great feature, and worked well during my brief listen.I since tried it while using Netflix on my phone, and the soundstage boosts the experience considerably, offering surround-sound-style directional audio capabilities.
It’s all made possible by Bose’s OpenAudio functionality, and bolstered by a load of high-tech audio smarts such as Snapdragon sound and what’s described as a ‘tightly-controlled acoustic structure’. It’s combined to make the audio on the buds best-in-class for the open-ear form factor: the sound is incredible and satisfyingly bassy, and at times I forgot the buds were open at all – it was just that good.
However, as with many headphones, they're a bit thin on the ground for features. We're
Bose Ultra Open Earbuds: Performance
I've been using the Bose Ultra Open Earbuds for about one month. In that time, I've used the earbuds on quite a few runs, listened to music during my commute, and taken virtual meetings at work. In that time, I've paired them to both phone and laptop, swapping between the two without much issue. I've had exactly one instance during which one earbud failed to connect to my phone, but unpairing and pairing the earbuds again got it working fine.
As mentioned above on the Features section, the sound is incredible, and I frequently forgot I was listening to a bud with open ears. I put that down to Bose's excellent work with the drivers, with one speaker pointed directly down my ear canal, and another pointing at the auricle, or outer part of my ear, to replicate the way our dish-shaped ears capture sound.
A big part of the appeal of open-ear buds (and the reason I'm writing this review, rather than a member of our dedicated audio team) is that the open-ear form factor is perfectly suited for, and usually aimed at, people who enjoy working out outdoors. The best bone conduction headphones are solidly aimed at runners, cyclists and swimmers, and most of the best open-ear buds are similar. The increased awareness offered by leaving your ears open is great for people like runners and cyclists, who need to be mindful of dangers such as traffic, pedestrians pets and more.
However, increasingly, open-ear headphones are being adopted as a lifestyle choice. Similar to Apple's AirPods Pro 2, which automatically lowers the volume in transparency mode when its microphones pick up that you're having a conversation, you can wear your earbuds while ordering at your local coffee shop, have conversations with your colleagues while wearing the buds with no trouble. It took me a while to get out of the habit of taking them out, but once I learned to press the right-hand button to pause my playlist, I found I could go all day wearing the earbuds without any trouble at all.
During my briefing, the Bose team did stress they were suitable for jogging and other workouts, showing footage involving runners. I've not worn the earbuds on any over-long runs just yet, using my Shoz OpenRun for serious training, but I have taken the Bose Ultra on several 6-7 km runs and one 12 km. Initially, I was worried the loose clip design was going to result in the buds falling out every few minutes, but only once did an earbud come out while I was fiddling with the volume and running simultaneously.
Otherwise, they've stayed in very well, remained incredibly comfortable and my confidence in them is much improved. The loose design would worry me if I was wearing a cycling helmet, as the strap may dislodge them: while they stay in well of their own accord even during vigorous movement, it doesn't take much physical force to send them spinning from your ears.
On the battery front, the Bose Ultra Open Earbuds live up to their claims. I got about six hours of use out of the buds before I got a low battery warning. The case, which is said to hold 19.5 hours of further playback, was also accurate to that estimation. It charges via USB-C, but unfortunately there's no wireless charging capabilities here.
Bose Ultra Open Earbuds: Early Verdict
I’m still yet to fully drain the battery, and there are a few tests I’ve yet to try, but overall I’m extremely impressed with how the Bose Ultra Open Earbuds have performed. The sound quality, as I’d expected, is wonderful, and the cool clip-on design is far more functional than I was anticipating.
The price is a sticking point, as for less money you can get the AirPods Pro 2, which offer transparency and ANC – I’ll probably knock half a star off for those omissions come my full review. However, these are the best-sounding open-ear headphones I’ve ever tried, and I’m looking forward to testing them further.
Matt Evans
Fitness, Wellness, and Wearables Editor
Matt is TechRadar's expert on all things fitness, wellness and wearable tech. A former staffer at Men's Health, he holds a Master's Degree in journalism from Cardiff and has written for brands like Runner's World, Women's Health, Men's Fitness, LiveScience and Fit&Well on everything fitness tech, exercise, nutrition and mental wellbeing.
Matt's a keen runner, ex-kickboxer, not averse to the odd yoga flow, and insists everyone should stretch every morning. When he’s not training or writing about health and fitness, he can be found reading doorstop-thick fantasy books with lots of fictional maps in them.
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