I’m not quite sure what “Soundpeats” is supposed to mean in a literal sense, but the young audio brand was savvy enough to keep the most important part of the name out front. Each pair of the new-ish company's earbuds I’ve tested have offered surprisingly good sound for the money.
The Soundpeats Air4 Pro, a not-so-subtle budget clone of Apple’s AirPods Pro (9/10, WIRED Recommends), are another testament to this growing legacy. These comfy buds serve up clear and engaging sound alongside features like noise canceling and transparency mode, multipoint pairing, and respectable battery life, all for well under $100.
Depending on when and where you grab them, the Air4 Pro’s malleable price tag stretches from around $50 up to $90. At the high end, you can do better with options like Soundcore’s Space A40 (8/10 WIRED Recommended) or the Liberty 4 NC (8/10 WIRED Recommended), but you’ll rarely find the Air4 Pro at full price. If you can snag them closer to their $50 floor price, you’ll be nabbing one of the best deals on the market and an excellent entry point into the world of feature-rich wireless buds.
As much as the Air4 Pro draw on the insanely popular AirPods Pro for design cues, you won’t be mistaking these budget buds for Apple’s pricier pair or other top flagships. The speckled charging case is slim and pocketable, but feels flimsier than high-end options, with glossy plastic on the interior that betrays its budget status. The buds also sit in the case opposite to how they go in your ears, which is slightly unintuitive.
The headphones themselves are more reassuring. Their solid, matte plastic stems lead to vented housings adorned with sensors for auto-pausing audio. The thin silicone ear tips and silver caps on the base of each stem still give a value-brand vibe, but the buds’ ergonomic shape and airy weight of under 5 grams per side go a long way to dispel any complaints. Like all my favorite models, the Air4 Pro seem to disappear in your ears over time, resting comfortably yet securely for hours.
The buds also confidently passed all the baseline usability tests that sometimes raise concerns in budget models. The Bluetooth 5.3 connection worked flawlessly across multiple devices, as did the auto-sensors and touch controls, with no notable issues over several days of testing.
That’s not to say the controls are perfect. After testing hundreds of wireless buds, I still found myself confounded by Soundpeats’ control layout multiple days in. Some commands, like holding the left touchpad to swap between ambient sound modes, make logical sense. Others, like utilizing the single tap gesture for volume control rather than play/pause, border on nihilistic chaos. There’s also no way to skip backward or repeat songs, and unlike a lot of buds I test, none of the controls are customizable.