Review: Sony’s WF-1000XM5 Earbuds Are a Flawed But Sound Investment

Even at $300, sound quality triumphs over a few design concerns

The black WF-1000XM5 earbuds, just released by Sony

The black WF-1000XM5 earbuds, just released by Sony

By Kirk Miller

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While I love Sony’s XM over-ear headphones, I’ve never quite had the same audio experience with the company’s earbuds. I liked the XM3 ‘buds but never really used them after a trial run — I found other earbuds that fit better and offered superior noise cancellation and controls, even if the sound quality wasn’t quite up to par. I was hoping Sony’s new WF-1000XM5 earbuds, released in late July, would make up for a few of the quibbles I had with previous models.

The brand was hyping its specially designed driver, Dynamic Driver X, along with improved proprietary processors; this, along with recalibrated earbud tips and dual feedback microphones was supposed to offer ideal noise cancellation to pair with ideal audio. The buds and case are also noticeably smaller than the XM predecessors.

Did Sony achieve its goals? Do I have a new favorite pair of earbuds? I tested out the buds for three weeks — in my home office, commuting to work, exercising in our building’s gym and during a flight.

Review: Sony’s WH-1000XM5 Headphones Are Their Best Yet
Intuitive controls and adaptive noise cancellation are worth the high price

The specs:

What works:

The silver WF-1000XM5 earbuds, as seen on recording artist Miguel
Sony

What sort of works:

What needs work:

Final thoughts:

Superior sound but also a lot of critiquing here. The big question: Are these earbuds worth $300?

Sony’s WF-1000XM5 earbuds have a lot of bells and whistles (mainly in the app) that deliver modest and sometimes frustrating results; the customizable equalizer is pretty good, Adaptive Sound Control needs work and ambient sound levels don’t seem to change much no matter what level you pick.

It might be my strange ear canals, but the earbud fit is loose (though not uncomfortable) and the buds themselves aren’t particularly handsome. 

That said, the sound here is ideal. If you subscribe to a streaming service compatible to the company’s 360 Reality Audio program, I couldn’t see you ever going back to another pair of earbuds. Even without the 360 (I was only able to test it, as I use and plan to stick with Spotify), this is excellent audio for earbuds — once you find your ideal equalizer setting (there’s a test on the app) you’ll probably be smitten.

As for me? I’ll still need something with a more secure fit for workouts — or even for rushing through subways. But at home? On days when I’m not up for the discomfort of over-ear headphones, I’ll happily keep my XM5 earbuds plugged in. 

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