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Beats Powerbeats Pro 2: Two-minute review
I’ll be frank (you can still be whatever your name is): a lot has changed in the world of Bluetooth audio since May 2019. That’s when the Powerbeats Pro 2’s forefathers burst onto the relatively new true wireless earbuds scene and promptly cornered its fledgling athletic sub-genre.
The thing is, the wealth of reliable earbuds any of us can pick up now for as little as $20 were inconceivable six years ago, so the Powerbeats Pro 2 arrive as an interesting (quite large, cumbersome even) proposition. If their storied heritage did not exist, we might actually question what Beats was doing releasing a set of earbuds with a large curling tail on one end that does not facilitate open-ear listening, but instead includes a more traditional driver housing and neck for creating a closed seal betwixt its ear-tip and your ear canal.
One might argue that in the past few years engineers have collected substantial data and used it to create concha-fit and droplet-shaped ergonomic driver housings, which means we no longer need arms for our earbuds – even for sports. We might even think it odd for Beats to be pitching such a design at athletes – because other bright sparks have invented open-ear true wireless earbuds in the past four years, and these let us easily hear traffic or our trainer’s voice as we work out.
But the Powerbeats Pro 2 get a hall pass for most of this, owing to the love we still have for the then-groundbreaking inaugural Powerbeats Pro. I remember the huge video ad I saw every day at London’s Waterloo Station, featuring Serena Williams serving both looks and tennis aces while wearing an ice-white, Wimbledon-friendly set of Powerbeats Pro. Those earbuds – which arrived before the inaugural AirPods Pro and actually, before the ‘Pro’ suffix became a mainstay of the audio vernacular – soon seemed as iconic as the superstars who wore them.
So we need to be asking not only how the Powerbeats Pro 2 stand up against the best noise-cancelling earbuds aimed at regular users, but also how they compare to the best open-ear headphones that, until recently, were the preserve of athletes. Okay, as a set of ‘regular’ wireless earbuds, the case you’ll be toting around is quite big – not quite coffee coaster big, but close. However, if you’re an Apple Music subscriber the head-tracked spatial audio works very well, and the noise cancellation is quite good; neither is as good as what you get with the AirPods Pro 2, but the spatial audio in particular isn’t far off.
Slipping them on isn’t as quick a job as it is with other earbuds, but once they’re on, if security is your main issue with Apple-styled buds you’ll be pleased – these Beats ain’t going anywhere. Also, at 10 hours from the buds and a further 3.5 charges in the case (for a whopping 45-hour total) the battery life is impressive, although if you’re using ANC or spatial audio it’s eight hours and a maximum playtime total of 36 hours. For clarity, you’ll only get 5.5 to seven hours from your AirPods Pro 2 before they need charging. Not bad, eh?
However, for a set of sports-focused earbuds that sit inside the ear, a good transparency mode is important, and despite Beats’ assurance that this is the most natural-sounding transparency mode in any set of Beats earbuds (with the adaptive algorithm powered by the H2 chip updating over 200 times per second) I’ve heard many more effective transparency profiles – and simply turning ANC off isn’t something I’d advise, since this listening profile adds to the already-slightly tinny issues through the top end, making the soundstage a little too forward and sweet overall.
Price-wise, they’re also a little hot and heavy-handed. Despite arriving at the same price as their older siblings, times have changed. You can buy similar designs for considerably less now; you couldn’t then.
But stop everything! We need to talk matters of the heart. Because make no mistake, you should feel ready to place your heart in Powerbeats Pro 2’s hands here, either via the Health app or your compatible, linked fitness app. Beats told me heart-rate monitoring had been on the company’s mood boards for inclusion since 2014, and the feature’s debut here is the result of well over four years on the bench with engineers (and subsequently in the ears of over 1,000 real-world athletes for testing).
What I can tell you is that the heart-rate monitor is here now, beautifully implemented in certain third-party apps when linked with Apple’s Health app. And because of the pulse readings, the super-secure fit and the excellent battery life, you may be prepared to forgive the few shortcomings I’ve talked about so far, plus a couple of sonic shortfalls I’ve yet to get into.
Beats Powerbeats Pro 2 review: Price & release date
- Unveiled on February 13, 2025
- Priced $249.99 / £249.99 / AU$399.95
How often can a product come in at the same $249.99 / £249.99 / AU$399.95 fee as its 2019 counterpart and still not be considered great value? Simply put, competition has brought prices right down. These days, $100 / £100 is top-end for inclusion in our best budget wireless earbuds guide, and anything above that goes into mid-range and flagship territory.
So for a brief comparison in the world of ‘regular’ buds, Bose’s QuietComfort Ultra Earbuds come in at $299 / £299 / AU$449 and Technics’ outstanding EAH-AZ100 are also in the same ballpark, at $299 / £259 / AU$499. Apple’s AirPods Pro 2 currently cost around $199 / £199 / AU$349. Sports-focused options often come in a fair way under these kinds of figures (the Shokz OpenFit Air arrived in summer 2024 with a $149 / £119 price-tag for example) although the Bose Ultra Open buck the affordable trend – they can now be yours for a similar $249 / £249 / AU$349.95, having arrived at $50 more than that.
All of this is food for thought, but don’t forget that none of the options I’ve listed above can monitor your heart-rate…
Beats Powerbeats Pro 2 review: Specifications
Drivers |
9.5mm dual-layer driver |
Active noise cancellation |
Yes |
Battery life |
Up to 10 hrs (buds), up to 45hr total |
Weight |
7g per earbud |
Connectivity |
Bluetooth 5.3 (Apple H2 chip), USB-C and wireless charging |
Waterproofing |
IPX4 |
Other features |
Heart-rate monitor, head-tracked spatial audio |
Beats Powerbeats Pro 2 review: Features
- Heart-rate monitoring is useful – unless you use an Apple Watch
- Spatial audio with head-tracking enhances commutes
- Disappointing IPX4 splash-proof rating
Let’s start with the ticker-taker. It’s not a new concept as I’ve already mentioned – Beats wanted to include it back in 2014 – but it’s been a long time in development. The tiny sensor at the helm in Powerbeats Pro 2 (which is derived from the Apple Watch, but is actually 1/16th of the size of the sensor in the Apple Watch Series 10) contains a photodiode, an optical lens, an accelerometer and an LED sensor, but Beats admits that this component “wasn’t that minuscule at first”. And while the ear is actually a great place to access your pulse, getting a sensor small, light and accurate enough to wear comfortably in a headshell was a “long, arduous process”.
Well, it’s here now – and if you’re not using anything else, it’s good. You need to be wearing both earbuds to get a reading, because when you do, that green LED light sensor in each earpiece pulses over 100 times per second, then measures the light reflected back to calculate how many times your heart is beating per minute.
Accessing the feature might seem a little limited or even disappointing at first (there’s no juicy ‘Heart-rate’ bubble in your iPhone Control Center when you click through, as I might have hoped) but this is because the Powerbeats Pro 2 are really meant to only start taking readings when you begin a workout, rather than to constantly monitor your pulse throughout the day or whenever you choose to summon a reading. That said, you can dig into your iPhone’s Health app, then either tap Browse at the bottom right > Heart > Heart Rate to call up a live figure, or go to Summary at the bottom left > Show All Health Data > Heart Rate, to see a graph of your live heart rate. But really, you’re meant to be in training and with a third-party fitness app. The only currently supported one I use is Nike Run Club, but once you’ve linked the app and given the necessary permissions in Settings, it works a treat.
It’s worth noting two things: if you wear an Apple Watch while using the Beats, the Watch readings are always prioritized, and secondly, Powerbeats Pro 2 don’t work with Apple Fitness Plus yet (which means no Strava support, ie. the one I’d really like it to work with). At the time of writing, heart-rate monitoring in Powerbeats Pro 2 is available in these iOS apps: Peloton, Slopes, Ladder, Open, Runna, YaoYao, and Nike Run Club, so plenty of activities are covered.
If you’re on Android, it’s different again (and arguably, better). Here, the feature will work with any fitness app that supports heart rate monitoring, you just need to manually start each training session with a double tap and hold on either earbud.
On both iOS and Android, you can turn the ticker-taker off in the settings, if you just don’t want it taking readings.
Now, on to Personalised Spatial Audio with Dolby Atmos and dynamic head-tracking. This is Apple’s 360-degree sound tech that adjusts the audio based on the shape of your ears, head, and – if you toggle it on – using your Apple device as a source so the audio has a fixed point of origin (and moves between each ear as you move your head towards said source device). I really rate this in Powerbeats Pro 2, thanks to the solid fit and seal the design promotes, particularly when listening to more acoustic tracks. Want to hear how good it is? Try listening to Sam Fender’s Arm’s Length and holding your device at arm’s length. Good, no?
The Powerbeats Pro 2 only support lossless audio with ultra-low latency on Apple Vision Pro, so while high-resolution is possible on these earbuds, it’s an expensive route – and I do not own a Vision Pro headset (but leave a comment if you’ve tested it – I’d love to know whether there’s a notable uptick in audio quality).
Call quality? It’s good: Powerbeats Pro 2 have a total of six microphones (three per earpiece) and callers throughout my testing said I sounded very clear and, on one occasion, “particularly empathetic”. Beats says there’s machine learning-based noise isolation tech at play, so callers will hear your voice at its best, aided by a voice accelerometer to detect when you’re speaking and thus enhance clarity. What I can tell you is that if you take calls often on your earbuds, you’ll be pleased here.
Other notable features include the option to customise what a press-and-hold of the physical ‘b’ button does on each earpiece (between Siri and noise control functions), automatic ear detection, Find My to locate a lost earbud in iOS (you can select which earbud you’d like to emit a beeping noise if it’s around the house, or see where they are on a map) and Find My Beats on Android via the companion app. But there’s no U1 chip in the charging case – and no speaker inbuilt as there is in AirPods Pro 2 and AirPods 4’s charging nests, so the case itself is silent. There’s also an ear tip fit test that is actually quite picky; I had to adjust to smaller ear tips to get the green light in both ears, even when I personally felt like I had it right.
As any AirPods owner will know, there’s no multi-point connectivity in Apple earbuds – and that hasn’t changed here. You can ‘share’ the audio you’re hearing in your Powerbeats Pro 2 to other Beats or Apple earbuds in the vicinity using Apple’s proprietary Share Audio option, but make no mistake, your Powerbeats Pro 2 can only be paired to one source device at a time. You also cannot tweak the EQ on a dedicated tab with the Powerbeats Pro 2 – although on iOS, you can go into your iPhone’s settings > Apps > Music > EQ to tweak things a little.
Finally (and I’m putting this under ‘features’ rather than ‘design’ since any sports-specific earbuds really ought to focus on durability) there’s a somewhat disappointing IPX4 rating for the earpieces, and the case is neither water- nor sweat-resistant at all. What that means is that while wearing the buds for sweaty workouts should be fine (the Powerbeats Pro 2 will survive light rain, humid environments and splashes of water), they absolutely positively cannot be submerged in the drink, which seems at odds with their, er… athleticism. And it’s not that it can’t be done: Samsung Galaxy Buds 3 Pro earpieces boast an IP57 rating, meaning they’ll survive a 30 minute full submersion in water up to a depth of one meter.
Beats Powerbeats Pro 2 review: Sound quality
- Energetic and forward-sounding – almost to a fault
- A little tinny in some profiles; beaten by the original Powerbeats Pro for bass weight
- Turning off noise-canceling negatively affects the sound
This is not quite the glowing praise that long-term fans of Beats’ Powerbeats Pro might have been hoping for. A 3.5-star rating for sound quality is not bad and make no mistake, the sound here is not without merit, but this is a huge and hotly-anticipated seventh-iteration Beats earbuds product and the heavily-leaked follow-up to the iconic Powerbeats Pro, nearly six years on. And I have to do my job: the sound isn’t excellent – and not just because only the relatively lowly SBC and AAC codecs are supported (ie. no hi-res audio, unless you’re using them with the Vision Pro).
Perhaps in part because the driver is smaller than in the original Powerbeats Pro (a 9.5mm dual-layer driver versus 12mm in the originals) the sound very different, and just a little more constricted. Deploying noise cancellation gives the Pro 2 the best chance to shine, and here, with dynamic head-tracked spatial audio also toggled on, there is separation and a healthy serving of detail in Tom Petty’s textured vocal in Free Fallin’, with guitar strings grazing each ear and a bridge as dynamically abrupt and agile as I remember. Nevertheless, cue up Gunna’s One of Wun and the smouldering track is notably moodier, fuller and more resonant through the low end in both AirPods Pro 2 and my Technics EAH-AZ100. Listen with the Technics and I’m dropped into the mix; switch to the Beats and I’m just a little bit above it, wanting to get stuck into the bass a little more.
The lengthy acoustic guitar intro in Rod Stewart’s Maggie May (known as ‘Henry’ and played by Martin Quittenton) has energy and pep – there’s no faulting the Powerbeats Pro 2 for timing across the frequencies – but as the track continues, the forward-focused nature of the Powerbeats Pro 2 rather over-emphasises the keys and mandolin in the upper mids, even making Rod-the-Mod’s voice sound a touch tinny. And sadly, things don’t improve when you turn noise-canceling off, which appears to heat the soundstage up a notch, as if we’re listening on cassette tape. Cue up the transparency mode and it helps quash the marginal sweetness, but during a run I simply didn’t feel like enough ambient noise filtered in – and there’s no way to tweak the levels of filtering in (or being nixed) here rather than ‘Transparency’, ‘Off’, or ‘Noise cancellation’.
- Sound quality score: 3.5/5
Beats Powerbeats Pro 2 review: Design
- A triumph for security (and for on-ear volume tweaks)
- Case is smaller, but still big by today’s standards
- They take a few seconds to fit – especially if you wear glasses
I’ve mentioned the slightly disappointing ‘only splash-proof’ IPX4 rating, so that’s out of the way. I’ve also praised the up-to-45-hour stamina, which is a huge plus. Other than that, there’s a lot to celebrate in the design department.
Said design (including the case, which can now charge wirelessly) is quite big by today’s standards, but the Powerbeats Pro 2 are only as big as some of the best open-fit earbuds – the kind with the arm that slinks around your ear. In fact, you’d be forgiven for thinking this is an open-fit pair of earbuds given their size, but they’re not – and for me, it’s one of their biggest strengths.
In 2025, it’s a very unusual proposition. Each earpiece also has a physical volume rocker on the bar above the ‘b’-branded driver housing and because nothing works as consistently and reliably as physical buttons (maybe you’re wearing gloves ’cause you’re skiing; maybe your phone’s in your kit bag) it’s an excellent decision. It also means you’re not fiddling with multiple presses of a main multi-function button to switch volume, which, as anyone used to this knows, can often mean unintended track skips or Siri piping up.
And the praise keeps coming! The colorways are excellent (see the ‘electric orange’ and ‘hyper purple’ colorways as well as your more standard black and ‘quick sand’ gray) and despite squeezing in that heart-rate monitor, Beats has made the Powerbeats Pro 2 light, very comfortable and unmovable. I tried to dislodge them during aerial hoop and silks training, spinning upside-down at speeds I’ve no business attempting these days, and they never even moved. Added to the extra pair of ear tips in the box, to equal five rather than four (the ear tip fit test won’t let you off lightly either), they’re honestly some of the most well-fitting earbuds I’ve ever tested.
The only downside to all this security? Fitting them requires a little bit of work and if you’re someone who tends to leave the house in a rush, you might find yourself reaching for earbuds you can throw in and go. Unlike open-ear options, you do need to make sure the Powerbeats Pro 2’s headshell is properly in your ear, then snake the arm around your ear, then twist everything back towards your crown, to lock it in. I often found myself accidentally pressing playback buttons while doing this or dropping one if I didn’t sit calmly to perform these tasks, especially since I wear glasses to look at my screen (and the arms of your glasses sit in the same spot as the arms of the Powerbeats Pro 2, behind the ear). The thing is, if security is your main issue, it’s worth it. Ultimately, the design here is still a hit with me.
Beats Powerbeats Pro 2 review: Value
- Excellent battery life
- Heart-rate monitor is a current USP
- Sonically they can be beaten for the money
At $249 / £249, the Beats Powerbeats Pro 2 are not cheap for a sports-focused set of earbuds – and indeed against Apple’s AirPods lineup, considering Apple now makes its new AirPods 4 for just $129. But the Powerbeats Pro 2 do contain a ticker-taking sensor no other AirPods can currently boast, and stamina levels that far exceed anything most earbuds can boast.
For me, the design is one of this proposition’s biggest strengths; to others, the case may be a little big for the class of 2025. They aren’t winning any awards sonically either – but the audio performance is a step up on most of the cheaper, sub-$100 wireless buds on the market when you deploy noise cancellation and dynamic head-tracked spatial audio. As always, it’s a matter of priorities.
Honestly, I never thought I’d recommend a product that can’t boast top-tier sound. But these earbuds go on for hour after hour, take your heart-rate and feel super-secure in your ears, so here we are…
Should I buy the Beats Powerbeats Pro 2 review:
Section |
Notes |
Score |
---|---|---|
Features |
The heart-rate monitor takes the limelight, but head-tracked spatial audio and enviable stamina are also worth noting |
4/5 |
Sound quality |
Of all their talents, sound quality is middling with the Powerbeats Pro 2 |
3.5/5 |
Design |
Some of the best-fitting and secure earbuds I’ve ever worn |
4.5/5 |
Value |
For stamina and security, they’re great value. If sound is king, less so |
4/5 |
Buy them if…
Don’t buy them if…
Beats Powerbeats Pro 2 review: Also consider
Header Cell – Column 0 |
Beats Powerbeats Pro 2 |
JBL Live Beam 3 |
Cambridge Audio Melomania M100 |
Bose QuietComfort Ultra Earbuds |
---|---|---|---|---|
Price |
$249 / £249 / AU$499 |
$199.95 / £179.99 / AU$249 |
$219 / £169 / AU$299 |
$299 / £299 / AU$449 |
Drivers |
9.5mm dual-layer |
10mm dynamic |
10mm driver, recycled Neodymium magnets |
10mm |
Active noise cancellation |
Yes |
Yes |
Yes |
Yes |
Quoted battery life |
Up to 10 hours (buds); 45 hours (case) |
Up to 12 hours (buds), up to 48hours total |
10 hours (buds) 33 hours total (with case) with ANC on |
6 hours (buds) 24 hours total (with case) |
Weight |
9g per earbud |
5g per earbud |
6.65g per earbud |
6.24g per earbud |
Connectivity |
Bluetooth 5.3 with SBC and AAC codec support |
Bluetooth 5.3 with LDAC, USB-C, |
Bluetooth 5.3, aptX Lossless, aptX Adaptive, AAC, SBC (USB-C and wireless charging) |
Bluetooth 5.3, USB-C, aptX Adaptive, Snapdragon Sound |
Frequency range |
Not stated |
20Hz – 40kHz |
Not stated |
Not stated |
Waterproofing |
Splash-proof, IPX4 |
Yes, IP55 |
Yes, IPX4 |
Yes, IPX4 |
Other features |
Heart-rate monitoring, six mics in total, Apple’s spatial audio with head-tracking |
Fit test, six-mics per bud, smart screen case, three spatial audio profiles |
Triple core processor architecture; class A/B amplification; three mics per earbud with noise suppression for calls |
High performance audio mode |
How I tested the Beats Powerbeats Pro 2
- Tested for two weeks; listened against the AirPods 4, AirPods Pro 2, Cambridge Audio Melomania M100, Technics EAH_AZ100, JBL Live Beam 3, Bose QuietComfort Earbuds Ultra
- Used at work, at home, during aerial training and on a beach in Florida
- Listened to Tidal, Apple Music and Spotify on an iPhone 12 Pro, a Sony Xperia 1 V and a MacBook Pro
The Beats Powerbeats Pro 2 became my musical travel companions for two full weeks – after a thorough 48-hour run-in period. They accompanied me while running errands (fast walking; on the London Underground network), at home and throughout a surfing vacation in Florida – although they never joined me in the water (they’re not waterproof, you see).
To better test the fit and security of the Powerbeats Pro 2, I wore them during a particularly upside-down aerial silks training session, a lyra (aerial hoop) class and a pole class, and they didn’t budge once.
To test the audio quality across the frequencies, I consulted TechRadar’s reference playlists (spanning everything from electro-pop to blues) on Apple Music, Qobuz and Tidal, but also to podcasts and albums on Spotify, and YouTube tutorials (mostly about how to bleed car brake pads, in case you were interested) on my MacBook Pro.
I’ve been testing audio products for just over six years now. As a dancer, aerialist and musical theater performer in a previous life, sound quality, the overall user experience and security have always been non-negotiable markers for me – and having heard how effective (and stress-relieving) ANC can be when the anti-phase tech is done well, I have grown to love it.
Read more about how we test
- First reviewed: February 2025
Read the full article here