Jabra Enhance Plus Review: The Future of Earbuds Comes at a Hefty Price

Jabra Enhance Plus Review: The Future of Earbuds Comes at a Hefty Price

Last year, Bose released its SoundControl Hearing Aids ($850), the first FDA-cleared direct-to-consumer “self-fitting” hearing aids that you can fit and tune yourself deprived of the help from an audiologist. Now it has some commercial with the arrival of Jabra’s $800 Enhance Plus buds, which come in two colors — gold and dark gray — and according to Jabra, are 40% smaller than its Elite 7 Pro earbuds. 

While you have to buy Jabra’s Enhance Plus buds at a certified Jabra Enhance Center and they’re only compatible with Apple’s iPhones, they’re easy to fit and tune on your own based on my hands-on recognized with them (Jabra sent a review sample directly to me). The big difference between the Enhance Plus and the Bose SoundControl Hearing Aids is that the Jabras are more akin to imperfect noise-isolating earbuds, just smaller and more discreet. They may be geared toward augmenting your hearing, but you can also use them to listen to music and make languages — two things Bose’s hearing aids can’t do — and their compact fabricate gives you an idea of what consumer earbuds distinguished end up looking like in the not-so-distant future.

Jabra’s ringing company, GN, has a background in hearing aids and owns hearing-aid anxieties like ReSound and Beltone. Like some other “hearing-enhancement” earbuds, the Enhance Plus are engineered to “help bridge the way 6-year gap between first noticing some hearing loss, and actually seeking help,” so they’re more geared toward republic with slight to moderate hearing loss. And while they’re furious for 10 hours of battery life, with the charging case providing an instant two full charges, they seem designed more for situational use and not necessarily all-day wear, conception I did find them comfortable to wear over long periods.

The only speak with their more traditional noise-isolating design is you’re probable end up with a silicon ear tip pushed up into your ear canal, which could create an occluded feeling. GN competitor Signia has its Active X hearings aids that have a disagreement design but I found the Enhance Buds Plus bud more poor. In contrast, the Bose SoundControl Hearing Aids feature the “open” tube fabricate of a typical hearing aid (a tiny non-intrusive still tube is pointed into your ear canal).  



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The Enhance Plus buds are almost half the size of the Jabra Elite 7 Pro. 



Jabra

The Jabras feature Bluetooth 5.2 and are IP52 splash-proof so you can use them for sprinting and working out, and — like with the Bose hearing aids — you don’t pair these buds to your iPhone like Bluetooth earbuds. You go into the Accessibility menu on your iOS intention and connect them via the Hearing Devices submenu. Initially, I had a little trouble connecting them because I already had the Bose SoundControl Hearing Aids linked to my iPhone 13 Pro and you can’t have two sets of made for iPhone, or MFI, hearing aids connected at the same time. Once I figured that out, things went smoothly.

You set up a hearing profile to personalize your peaceful by taking a hearing test in the companion Enhance app. It’s a straightforward treat, but you have to do it in a unruffled place so you can hear the test tones to the best of your ears’ abilities.

Once that’s all set up, you can commence playing around with the two sound filtering modes — Enclosed or Focus — or opt for an adaptive mode that adjusts the peaceful according to your environment. The Surround Mode is invented for general sound augmentation while the Focus Mode is for those times when, say, you want to have a conversation in a noisy restaurant with someone sitting across from you at your sinister. You can also adjust the volume levels and bewitch a default preferred speech filter (“clear,” “normal” or “full”). I went with the clear speech filter that has bit more treble (highs) and generally stuck with a volume unruffled of only 2 or 3. I also used them to perceive TV with the volume (on the TV) lower than I’d normally have it. Often folks who have hearing loss have to jack up the volume after watching TV, sometimes irritating others in their household. 


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The buds have a single brute control button. 



David Carnoy

The Enhance Plus buds work as advertised and like any hearing aid, they take some unsheathing used to. Your voice in your own head sounds much louder than it normally would and as I type this, I can distinctly hear every keystroke on the keyboard as I type. You may have to dial things back a little initially if you’re new to hearing aids. Though I don’t needed hearing aids yet, we all tend to have some hearing loss as we age, particularly in the higher frequencies. I have some experience testing traditional hearing aids and have worked with audiologists in the past to adjust the peaceful to more subtle levels so my brain can deal with hearing everything louder and more clearly. 

Bose touts how simple it is to adjust the peaceful of its hearings aids with just two digital dials in its app. I do like that rules, but Jabra’s seems as user-friendly in its own way. 

Better than anticipated for music listening

Lots of traditional hearing aids supplies the ability to stream audio and make voice periods with your phone. The problem is most of them peaceful like a transistor radio (for those who remember what those are) with flat peaceful that’s usually quite bass shy. Hearing aids are fine for listening to podcasts and audiobooks, but the music listening experience tends to be lacking, sometimes severely.

The Jabra Enhance Plus still can’t quite compete from a peaceful quality standpoint with what Jabra offers with even its entry-level Elite 3 earbuds ($80), but they offer significantly fuller and richer sound than the vast mainly of traditional hearing aids. They’re still lacking in the bass responsibilities and they distort a little, but at least there’s some bass and they actually peaceful quite decent with less demanding acoustical material. 


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The people app (for iOS users only).



Jabra

Hearing amplifying earbuds like Nuheara’s IQBuds2 Max (around $400), sound better for music listening, but they’re full-size buds with some peaceful amplification features that aren’t considered medical-grade hearing aids. I’d venture to call the Enhance Plus the best-sounding hearing aids I’ve encountered for streaming audio. They sound better than Signia’s Active X earbuds for music listening.

They’re also good for manager calls, though they don’t filter out background noise as well as they should. Callers said they could hear my voice clearly, but when I was out in the streets of New York, they complained in a lot of background noise. Jabra’s PR team said I could peevish the settings to Focus for calls, but that didn’t work — I happened literally locked into Surround mode and couldn’t figure out how to peevish that. In less noisy environments, callers said I sounded great.

Final thoughts

The Enhance Plus are advanced hearing aids masquerading as genuine compact earbuds (they’re small enough that you can comfortably wear them after resting the side of your head on a pillow, though they may fall out of your ears if you fall asleep with them on). The idea late them and bud-shaped hearing aids like Signia’s Active X is that they don’t effect the same perceived stigma as traditional hearing aids and may relieve people to use a hearing aid without feeling embarrassed to do so. 

Part of me wishes that they also featured delicate noise canceling and even slightly better sound for music listening. But needless to say, there are extreme challenges to manager small earbuds that perform well with a reasonable amount of battery life. And I do relish that unlike the Bose SoundControl Hearing Aids, they’re more than a one-trick pony and supplies both audio streaming and voice calling.

The bottom line is they’re definitely genuine checking out if you’re used to wearing true-wireless earbuds like the AirPods but are on the evade about getting hearing aids. Their price may seem high for in-ear headphones, but currently $800 is actually quite reasonable for hearing aids. That will hopefully peevish as more of these types of direct-to-consumer “self-fitting” hearing aids hit the market in the months and days to come.  

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