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Shokz OpenFit Pro: Two-minute review
Shokz knows its way around a pair of open earbuds. At the time of writing, the brand has three entries in our best open earbuds with good reason — it is one of the few companies out there dedicated to the fitness headphone/bone conduction market.
Sure, they’re still tailor-made for runners, cyclists and general sporty types — including tennis, in my case — but the OpenFit Pro are pushing the barriers of what open earbuds can be for dyed-in-the-wool audiophiles. Want Dolby Atmos with head-tracking tehcnology? They’ve got it. Want customizable EQ profiles, in addition to the five provided by the Shokz app? They’ve got them. Want support accessories for an even more secure fit? Yep, them too.
Even want active noise cancellation? OK, they’ve not quite got that — these are still open earbuds, after all — but they do have what Shokz calls ‘noise reduction’, courtesy of a synchronized dual-diaphragm driver and triple-mic system with the Shokz ear-adaptive algorithm. This is incredibly rare in open earbuds and the results are mightily impressive. Sure, they can’t block out everything in the way a pair of in-ears with active noise cancellation can, but in ‘noise reduction mode’ they do a damn good job if you need to keep regular life at bay and concentrate.
With Bass Boost selected from one of the five EQ presets, they deliver a punchy, nuanced sound that is impressively clear and detailed. The Dolby Atmos with head tracking is a welcome addition, especially in an office environment when turning your head from side to side to speak to colleagues, and delivers responsive sound to the ear that is closest to the source device.
Design-wise, the carry case is small enough to fit into your pocket, battery life is superb-to-relentless and the comfort akin to wearing air. On more than one occasion, I’d forgotten I was wearing them. While exercising, I never felt like they would slip, let alone fall out, especially after I fitted the rubber o-ring for extra stability.
The Shokz OpenFit Pro, then, are audiophile-friendly open earbuds that fully warrant their place in the best we’ve tested. They may be a little on the expensive side compared to the competition, but when you consider the aural additions these feature that almost no other open ears possess, they’re worth it.
Open earbuds used to be the sole preserve of runners or cyclists who wanted to listen to background music without getting mown down by traffic. Not any more.
Shokz OpenFit Pro review: Specifications
|
Component |
Value |
|
Water resistant |
IP55 |
|
Battery life |
12 hours (earbuds, noise reduction disabled), 50 hours (total) |
|
Bluetooth type |
Bluetooth 6.1 |
|
Weight |
12.3g per earbud |
|
Driver |
Ultra large 11 × 20-mm synchronized dual-diaphragm |
Shokz OpenFit Pro review: Price and availability
- Released January 2026
- Priced at $249.95 / £219 / AU$399
The Shokz OpenFit Pro launched at CES in January 2026 and went on sale immediately. You can pick up the OpenFit Pro for $249.95 / £219 / AU$399 RRP, though there are some discounts available already via some retailers.
That makes them a fairly hefty chunk more expensive than our class-leading Shokz OpenFit 2+ ($179.95 / £169 / AU$350), but still (just about) cheaper than the Bose Ultra Open Earbuds at launch. So the big questions are what bang do you get for your extra buck(s), and are they worth the expense?
In order: lots, and yes.
Shokz OpenFit Pro review: Features
- 12-hour battery life, 50 hours with case
- Noise reduction, not cancellation, is excellent
- Bluetooth 6.1; IP55 for water- and dust-resistance
The biggest criticism usually laid at any open earbuds’ door is their lack of versatility. Sure, they’re great if you want to listen to something while working out — that’s why a sporty type, like me, is doing this review while TechRadar‘s brilliant audio editor Becky Scarrott, who did the initial experiential, is indisposed with a frozen shoulder — but you would want something much punchier and full-blooded for everyday listening. They’re a second pair, nothing more.
The Shokz OpenFit Pro want to be more, and we’ll come on to that, but first let’s deal with their fitness side. I hate anything jammed into my earhole, so their open-ear design is perfect for me, and allowing external ambient sounds through is essential for the running and cycling I mostly did while wearing them during a month-long stint working at the recent 2026 Winter Olympics in Milan.
While cycling, your ears are your mirrors and the balance between listening to Only God Knows by Young Fathers and hearing traffic behind me was about perfect. When running, especially the 3.5km between hotel and office at the Winter Olympics, I could at all times hear the maniacal Milanese drivers who would otherwise have mown me down without a second’s thought had I been too zoned in on Fontaines D.C.’s Romance LP.
Connection, that includes multi-point pairing, was never a problem thanks to the Shokz’ uber-stable Bluetooth 6.1 technology and nor was getting extra sweaty with their IP55 rating good for water and dust resistance.
In my (windowless) office in Milan, I also used the OpenFit Pro to transcribe athlete flash quotes and take reliably crystal-clear calls from reporters despite the high-pressure, higher-noise newsroom environment surrounding me. The same was true when calling my fiancée — your aforementioned Techradar audio editor, no less — from a packed pizzeria and an evening watching figure skating from opposite ends of the arena (it’s a long story).
The battery life is more than above average and borders on the relentless. Shokz promise 12 hours of listening from a single charge, plus another 50 hours from the slimline and lightweight case, which I found to be about bang on. On a couple of occasions I ran into the office with only the earbuds, used them regularly to listen to and transcribe interviews on a 10-hour shift and ran back to the hotel. They lasted all day and even got me back into the office the following morning (this time with the charging case in my back pocket).
In a bit of rush? No problem, 10 minutes of fast charging will give you four hours’ listening. Wireless charging is also an option, albeit at a slower pace. Sure these figures come down a bit when you turn on ‘noise reduction’ mode — six hours from a charge, another 24 from the case — but we’re still talking about listening periods firmly in the ‘every day’ territory.
Time to talk about why you’d want to. That ‘noise reduction’ mode really is excellent for a pair of open earbuds. It’s basically impossible for the Shokz to have ANC but the noise reduction technology, helped by the brand’s SuperBoost technology, ear adaptive algorithm and synchronized dual-diaphragm driver, does a great job of blocking out more of the world.
The companion Shokz app is also a boon. It’s home to five EQ presets, plus two options to create your own sound profiles, and is also the destination to turn on ‘noise reduction’ (touch control toggles are also available), Dolby Atmos and head tracking technology. You can also customize those multi-point connections and use the very useful ‘Find My Earbuds’ function.
The overall impression is very positive. Sure, closed earbuds have a bigger feature set in general — but the fact that all this exists in a set of open earbuds, is pretty impressive indeed.
Shokz OpenFit Pro review: Sound quality
- Noise reduction excellent for open-ear design
- Dolby Atmos and head-tracking technology
- Treble can overwhelm
The difference in price between the Shokz OpenFit Pro and the vast majority of their competitors can be explained in how they sound, or at least, how they try to sound. Remember, at a price touching $250, Shokz are going after an audiophile market here.
For the most part, they succeed. The detail at the low end — especially with EQ preset Bass Boost turned on in the Shokz app — is impressively dynamic, and weighty enough to almost make you forget that these are open earbuds. Wet Leg’s Chaise Longue loses none of its lustrous early bass power thanks to that synchronized dual-diaphragm driver, while Age of Consent by New Order enhances the propulsive force of Peter Hook’s four-string.
If treble is your bag, you’re also in luck, but you’ve really got to love it. Treble Boost brings forward guitars and vocals — only accentuated further if you switch on the Vocal setting in the app – which sound at their best for semi-spoken word songs like Go! by Public Service Broadcasting but for my money it’s to the detriment of the overall sound profile.
Bass gets lost and the treble overwhelms to the point it sounds a little tinny, rendering a song as good as The Concept by Teenage Fanclub almost unlistenable — so much Norman Blake and Raymond McGinley rhythm guitar and almost no Gerard Love woozy bass.
You can also create your own EQ in the app, which, though a little fiddly, does do a good job in establishing a Goldilocks setting just for you. In the end, though, I listened almost exclusively in Bass Boost mode and felt all the happier for having done so.
The OpenFit Pro’s aforementioned noise reduction mode does as good a job as can be expected from a set of open earbuds. Helped by a triple-mic system (up from two in the OpenFit 2), Shokz’s ear-adaptive algorithm can predict external noise and delivers a solid reduction in what you hear. In the app, you can also select how much noise reduction you actually want with a toggle, although I didn’t notice much difference. You will, though, have to crank up the volume to a Spinal Tap 11 if you want to block out the world around you — in doing so, I had a notification on my phone telling me I had “exceeded the recommended limit for audio exposure” over the previous seven days. This has never happened to me before.
I tended to use noise reduction only when in an office environment and needed to focus — I’m not the biggest fan of ANC in general and found the noise reduction here too manufactured to the point of slight nausea — but it’s easy to turn on and off with either the buds themselves or using the Shokz app. On my flight home, it also made an appreciable difference to both aircraft and wailing baby noise, albeit nothing compared with my Cambridge Audio Melomania P100s, which combine an over-ear seal with ANC.
Elsewhere, the combination of Dolby Atmos and head-tracked spatial audio is a winner. It upscales TV on the Radio’s Wolf Like Me without sounding too muddy, while listening again to Tidal’s Dolby Atmos version of Wet Leg’s Chaise Longue was a transformative experience. With both Dolby Atmos and head-tracking switched on, the bass-heavy intro is punchier, with extra clarity, and you feel ‘in the mix’ much more throughout.
When a breathy ‘what?’ halfway through the first verse appeared from apparently behind my right ear, I genuinely turned around, certain a prank was being played on me by a sleep-deprived Olympics colleague. Only when the same happened moments later in my left ear, having turned my head, was I finally assuaged that it was vocalist Rhian Teasdale with some Dolby Atmos help. You might think it’s a gimmick, but it genuinely felt like she was in the room.
- Sound quality score: 4.5/5
Shokz OpenFit Pro review: Design
- Super-comfortable and endlessly tactile
- Portable charging case
- Sound leakage at upper volume a problem
The best thing to be said about the OpenFit Pro’s design is that on numerous occasions after pausing a track to deal with a work enquiry, I simply forgot I was wearing them. They really are that comfortable, especially over long periods. They sit snugly around your ear, too, with a handy demonstration from the Shokz app of how to fit them if you’re a luddite like me.
Weighing 12.3g, each bud may be a little heavier than our current open-ear market leaders the OpenFit 2+ (9.4g) but, typical of the Shokz oeuvre, the OpenFit Pro’s general silicone stylings are supremely tactile. The driver housing is made from an ‘aerospace-grade aluminium PMI dome cap’ which adds security and a well-positioned nub that sits perfectly to direct sound straight into the ear. It’s the same with the charging case, which feels premium and is small enough to fit in your pocket — whether jeans or even running shorts, as I found.
Thanks to the OpenFit Pro, for the first time in my 30 years’ playing competitive tennis (yes, my name really is Andy Murray), I listened to music during match training. How your opponent hits the ball is your biggest clue to their shot — its pace, its spin and even its trajectory — and despite listening to Queens of the Stone Age banger The Lost Art Of Keeping A Secret, while warming up I could still hear and track the ball in the way I always have. I wouldn’t wear the Shokz for anything more than a 15-minute warm up — my addled brain can only cope with doing so many things at once — but they brought a new way of interacting with a sport I love.
Unlike running and cycling’s repetitive movements, tennis’ reactive twisting and turning really gave the OpenFit Pro a stability workout to stay on my ears. And they managed it. In tougher rallies, I found my right earbud feeling slightly unstable, but attaching the supplied ultra-soft silicone o-rings to the inside of earpiece sorted that in a heartbeat. I always wear a baseball cap when playing tennis, as well as a helmet while cycling, and neither interfered with the Shokz sitting snugly around my ears.
I regularly put on and took off jumpers, T-shirts and sportswear without having to take out the buds. As if to prove a point, I just put on a hoodie while writing this sentence. The fit really is excellent. The buds, that is. The hoodie has probably seen better days.
Whether in white or the review sample black I tested, the OpenFit Pro look sleek, smart and unobtrusive — numerous colleagues in Milan were surprised when asking me a question and I’d respond by either taking off the Shokz or using the buds’ touch controls to pause.
Those touch controls are great, by the way. Each bud has an easily accessible nub, which does everything. One quick press on either bud for pause, and answer and end call; double click for skip track; triple click for previous track; a quick press followed by a continuous hold does volume up (right) and down (left); and press and hold to toggle noise reduction. These are all customizable in the Shokz app, too. Listening to Fontaines D.C.’s Starburster over and over with that triple click saw me through a couple of 3.5km PBs.
Only in one design area does the OpenFit Pro suffer, and it’s one familiar to any regular open earbuds wearer. Despite the clever noise reduction mode, to really block out the world around you’ll need to crank the volume, making sound leakage a problem. At 50% volume in a silent room it’s barely audible, but start to push things further to drown out external stimuli and it’s immediately obvious.
On the morning commute this shouldn’t be a problem if you don’t want your neighbor to know you’re getting your groove on to Chappell Roan’s Pink Pony Club, but while my fiancée was watching TV, she could hear my dirty secret from across the room when I tried to drown out her weekend Homes Under the Hammer catchup. Nor does the ‘Private’ EQ setting particularly help – there’s only a negligible improvement for your companion and the bass suffers significantly for you. I wouldn’t bother.
Shokz OpenFit Pro review: Value
In the general scheme of things, the Shokz OpenFit Pro aren’t that expensive, it’s just that for nearly $250 they come in at the north end of the open earbud market, albeit not quite as pricy as the Bose Ultra Open Earbuds. With noise reduction, Dolby Atmos and head-tracking technology, though, Shokz seem to be targeting these as the only buds you need in your listening arsenal.
So, are they worth it? In audio terms, absolutely. You quite simply won’t find a better-sounding set of open earbuds with this feature set, and as sturdy a battery life. I wouldn’t necessarily throw out your regular over-ears or ANC in-ears just yet, though. There are times when you need to zone in and hear nothing of the outside world.
That being said, as a pair of sports-specific open earbuds, I don’t think you’ll find better.
Shokz OpenFit Pro review: scorecard
|
Category |
Comment |
Score |
|
Features |
It’s a packed set, with as much on offer as can be expected from a set of open ears. |
5/5 |
|
Sound quality |
Noise reduction is effectively ANC for an open-ear design, with Dolby Atmos and head tracking nice extras. Tinny treble, though. |
4.5/5 |
|
Design |
So comfortable and tactile you’ll forget you’re wearing them, but sound leakage at upper volumes is an issue. |
4.5/5 |
|
Value |
They’re still a second set, but what a great-sounding second set to have. |
4.5/5 |
Shokz OpenFit Pro: Should I buy them?
Buy them if…
Don’t buy them if…
Also consider
|
Component |
Shokz OpenFit Pro |
Shokz OpenFit 2+ |
Bose Ultra Open Earbuds |
|
Water resistant |
IP55 |
IP55 |
IPX4 |
|
Battery life |
12 hours (earbuds, noise reduction disabled), 50 hours total |
11 hours (earbuds), 48 hours (total) |
7.5 hours (earbuds), 27 hours (total) |
|
Bluetooth type |
Bluetooth 6.1 |
Bluetooth 5.4 |
Bluetooth 5.3 |
|
Weight |
12.3g per earbud |
9.4g / Charging case: 56g |
6g / Charging case: 43g |
|
Driver |
Ultra large 11 x 20mm synchronized dual-diaphragm |
21mm x 11mm custom dynamic driver |
12mm |
How I tested
I tested the Shokz OpenFit Pro for well over a month, which is longer than our regular testing period at TechRadar.
The buds were paired to an iPhone for the entirety of the testing, using Tidal’s high-res and Dolby Atmos audio outputs. I used them at home at work and also on runs, while cycling and even playing tennis, at which I’ve competed at a high level for 30 years.
Read more about how we test
- First reviewed: April 2026
Read the full article here