Review: Did JLab Create a Cheaper Alternative to the AirPod Pro’s Hearing Aid Feature?

The audio brand’s $100 HEAR earbuds are built for music and hearing enhancement

JLab HEAR earbuds in beige, next to a phone with the JLab app

Can you hear me now? JLab wants your earbuds to double as a hearing aid

By Kirk Miller

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Apple recently garnered a lot of positive coverage for an older product — after a recent iOS update, their second-generation AirPods Pro earbuds (released in 2022) now feature a clinical-grade Hearing Aid capability. 

Which is great, and yes, I’ve been testing them out. But for those of you who can’t or don’t want to spend $180-$250, there’s another earbud option with a built-in hearing aid: The JLab HEAR OTC Hearing Aid.

Available in three colors and costing just $100, HEAR was released earlier this year and months before the AirPods hearing aid update. The JLAB buds are both standard earbuds and a hearing enhancement aid, with the bonus of looking exactly like any other audio earbud. 

We’ll just start by saying under most metrics the AirPods Pro win out — noise cancellation, sound quality, aesthetics, etc. But my goal was to figure out if a $100 pair of average-looking earbuds could work both as a day-to-day audio option and something I could use in meetings or loud spaces to combat my modest hearing impairment. 

I took the JLab HEAR earbuds out for a few weeks and tested them on commutes, on a plane and in meetings. 

The specs:

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What works:

What kind of works:

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JLab

What needs work:

Final thoughts

I walked into my living room where our TV was on quite loud (as per usual). With the HEAR buds in, I realized just how loud we had our settings — I feel sorry for our neighbors. If anything, I could probably wear these while watching a movie and keep the volume down by at least 40%.

I think the best review I’ve read (from an Amazon customer) summed up the HEAR correctly — the earbuds are really an amplifier [and] not so much a hearing aid. Still, these are modestly priced earbuds that provide what I’d consider a secretive level of hearing help in certain situations. And as I get older, having a low-key way to navigate loud bars or echoey conference rooms is a bonus. 

In comparison, my very early thoughts on the AirPods Pro’s hearing capabilities? Better, but still not a magic solution to my everyday hearing issues, where normal voices (in certain conditions) seem muffled. And AirPods are certainly more noticeable in public — with the JLab HEAR, I felt less rude wearing these in bars or at meetings. 

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