Bose SoundSport Wireless review: Bluetooth earphones for sports enthusiasts and commuters

Great sound quality and fit, but a few niggles and a high price mean they’re not our favourite sports headphones
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Reviewed By
Published on 29 November 2022
Our rating
Reviewed price £150 inc VAT
Pros
  • Great sound quality
  • Snug, secure fit
Cons
  • Remote box drags cable around your neck to the right
  • Expensive
  • Short battery life

Bose is famed, quite rightly, for its noise-cancelling headphones, but the firm also produces a range of standard headphones. The Bose SoundSport Wireless is one such product, but its target audience is very different from the business-traveller type the firm usually goes after.

The Bose SoundSport Wireless headphones are aimed, in fact, at sporty types: anyone who may be keen on keeping fit but for whom the drudgery of the treadmill or rowing machine is just too much to bear.

As such, they’re Bluetooth wireless headphones, lightweight and colourful, with a built-in battery, a microphone for making and taking calls, and a remote control built in. They’re sweat- and splash-proof and they sound pretty sweet, too.

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There’s a huge number of regular Bluetooth earbuds fighting for your cash and competition in the sports headset arena is almost as fierce. At £150, though, the Bose SoundSport Wireless are pricey for sports headphones especially as they don’t have extra luxuries such as MP3 playback or a heart-rate monitor.

At around £120, you can pick up a pair of Gibson Trainer Ti100s, which have built-in lights for running at night, the Under Armour Wireless Heart Rate earphones, which read your pulse, or the Sony Walkman NW-WS413, which cost £80 and have an MP3 player built in. Then you have the BeatsX, which offer sweat-resistance, sports-specific tips and Apple’s W1 Bluetooth chip for seamless connectivity with iPhones and other Apple products.

Bose SoundSport Wireless Headphones - Aqua Blue

Bose SoundSport Wireless Headphones – Aqua Blue

£103.16

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So what DO the Bose SoundSport Wireless offer that the competition doesn’t? On paper, at least, the answer to that question seems to be “not a lot”. Battery life isn’t exceptional at a claimed “up to six hours”. They’re sweat-proof, but not IP-rated. And there are only three pairs of ear tips supplied in the box, so it’s possible you won’t find a snug fit.

That’s not to say these are a poor pair of headphones, though; far from it. If they fit your ears, and their popularity indicates they will most people, you’ll find them a comfortable, secure fit. They sit on the outside of the ear canal rather than slipping in all the way like most earphones, allowing you to hear some of what’s going on around you instead of being sealed off from the outside world. Each “umbrella” tip is kitted out with rubber wings that hook into the outer part of your ear, locking them in place when you rotate the earpiece.

The neck cable is just the right length: not too short and not so long that it snags on your shirt collar. And, although the earpiece housings protrude around a centimetre out from the ear (a touch further than I’d like), they never felt like they’d fall out and they aren’t too heavy.

The one caveat here is that the battery, remote control and microphone box sits on the part of the cable that leads out from the right-hand earpiece. As you bounce down the road, it tends to pull the cable around to that side, which is why Bose includes a shirt, to keep the cable anchored in place. It’s a bit fiddly to secure, though. Bose needs to take a look at the design of the BeatsX or the Gibson Ti100 Trainer, because these headphones nail this particular part of sports headphone design without the need for a clip.

Sound quality is good, though, and typically Bose-esque in profile. Bass is solid and meaty, delivering the eighties synth bassline of Kraftwerk’s “The Robots” with a pleasingly weighty thump, but it’s not too blousy and indistinct. There’s also plenty of detail in the upper registers and the mid-range is pleasingly open.

The SoundSport can come across a tad polite with some rock music and metal, but since most of the time you’ll be running or cycling or performing some other activity that induces heavy breathing, that shouldn’t be too much of a problem. Those umbrella tips mean microphonic cable rubbing noise isn’t a problem, either. Overall, sound quality is excellent, despite the lack of aptX support.

Battery life, on the other hand, is a little disappointing. It’s enough to get you through a couple of days’ worth of exercising and commuting, but you’ll need to charge the headphones at the very least twice a week, even if you use them lightly. At least they’re easy and quick to charge, with a micro-USB port located on the left earpiece beneath a flap.

Bose SoundSport Wireless Headphones - Aqua Blue

Bose SoundSport Wireless Headphones – Aqua Blue

£103.16

Check price

Overall, the Bose SoundSport Wireless are a bit of a mixed bag. On the one hand, they fit securely and sound great; on the other, the cable slips to the side when you’re walking or running and battery life is disappointing.

They’re also quite expensive, which means it’s impossible to give them an unreserved thumbs up, especially now you can get hold of the better-designed Gibson Ti100 Trainer and the Under Armour Wireless Heart Rate earphones for £30 less. They’re good but not great.

Written by

Christopher was the deputy reviews editor at Expert Reviews. He has been reviewing consumer technology on his website and YouTube since 2007. He holds a strong passion for technology, and his specialities lie in audio, smartphones, computers, visual displays and PC peripherals. Christopher also has experience in the world of PR, having previously worked in the field for two years.

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Reviewed By

Head of reviews at Expert Reviews, Jon has been testing and writing about products since before most of you were born (well, only if you were born after 1996). In that time he’s tested and reviewed hundreds of laptops, PCs, smartphones, vacuum cleaners, coffee machines, doorbells, cameras and more. He’s worked on websites since the early days of tech, writing game reviews for AOL and hardware reviews for PC Pro, Computer Buyer and other print publications. He’s also had work published in Trusted Reviews, Computing Which? and The Observer. And yet, even after so many years in the industry, there’s still nothing more he loves than getting to grips with a new product and putting it through its paces.

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