Sony’s new LinkBuds Clip Open feel like the natural next step in the slow rebellion against in-ear silicone tips. Instead of plugging your ears, they hang off them like a tiny C-shaped earring, letting the world in while your music, podcasts, or calls float alongside it. And because this is 2026, of course, there’s an AI angle, a “quiet” mode, and a promise that the person next to you can’t hear what you’re listening to.
At a glance, the concept isn’t brand new. Bose kicked off the mainstream clip-on trend with its Ultra Open Earbuds, which hook onto the edge of your ear and beam sound toward the canal without sealing it. JVC, Shokz, and even budget brands like Soundcore have already treated ears like real estate, experimenting with near-ear and open-ring designs aimed at people who hate the stuffed-ear feeling of typical buds. Sony is late to this party, but it arrives with some smart details and a bit of its usual audio swagger.
The hardware itself is deliberately low-pressure, literally. Instead of pushing against your ear canal, each bud is a C-shaped clip that wraps around the back of your ear and rests a small 10mm driver just outside the opening. That design means no pressure on the inner ear, less fatigue over long stretches, and a better chance they’ll work for people whose ears simply refuse to cooperate with traditional in-ears. Sony even ships “fitting cushions” that attach to the clip to tweak the feel and stability, which is a nice nod to the reality that ears are wildly different from person to person.
Despite the fairly compact look, the battery figures are very much in the “wear-all-day” camp: up to nine hours of playback from the buds themselves and up to 37 hours total with the charging case. A three-minute top-up over USB-C gets you roughly an hour of listening, which is exactly the kind of get-out-the-door safety net you want when one bud inevitably dies right before a commute. The case is a small clamshell brick that weighs around 42 grams and doesn’t bother with wireless charging, but it does come with customizable color covers if you want something a bit louder than plain plastic.
Sony is leaning into color here more than it often does: black, green, lavender, and a beige-gray mix the company insists on calling “greige.” That palette, plus the slightly jewelry-adjacent clip form factor, clearly aims at the same audience that appreciated Bose’s Ultra Open earbuds, looking more like chunky earrings than tech. As open earbuds increasingly double as accessories, this kind of design-first positioning matters almost as much as codec support or driver size.
Under the surface, the LinkBuds Clip Open lean on a 10mm driver with a standard 20Hz–20kHz response and support for SBC and AAC Bluetooth codecs. There’s no LDAC or other lossless-style option here, which might disappoint some Sony loyalists who associate the brand with hi-res logos and audiophile bullet points. To compensate, Sony includes its DSEE (Digital Sound Enhancement Engine) upscaling, a 10-band EQ, and support for 360 Reality Audio for spatial-ish listening when the track and app cooperate.
Where Sony really tries to differentiate is in how these buds behave once you’re out in the world, particularly with their three listening modes. There’s a standard profile for music, a Voice Boost mode that lifts mids so podcasts and calls stand out over street noise, and the headline-grabbing “sound leakage reduction” mode, which keeps volume in check to avoid broadcasting your audio into quiet environments. Functionally, that last mode is less about turning the earbuds into some magical cone of silence and more about enforcing realistic volume ceilings and tuning to minimize spill, which is still useful if you’re in a library, on a train, or in a shared office.
The “others can’t listen in” promise is tapping into the same anxiety Bose addressed with its Ultra Open line, which showed that clever driver placement and directional audio can keep leakage surprisingly low even without a seal. Open-style earbuds will always bleed more than deep in-ear tips at the same volume, but in practice, you’re usually listening at a lower volume because you’re also hearing your surroundings. Sony’s approach combines directional drivers, tuning, and that leakage reduction mode to keep whatever you’re listening to decently private in most normal settings.
What might surprise people is how seriously Sony takes calls on these. Because the buds sit farther from your mouth than typical stems, Sony had to lean on a bone conduction sensor and AI-driven noise reduction to keep your voice usable on the other end. A bone conduction pickup reads vibrations from your jaw, while the AI filters out environmental noise so your spoken audio sounds more like a close mic and less like you’re shouting across a room. For anyone taking tons of calls in transit or in noisy co-working spaces, this is a big part of the value proposition: your ears stay open, but your voice doesn’t get lost in the chaos.
On the connectivity side, the tech is very 2026-standard: Bluetooth 5.3, multipoint pairing so you can stay connected to a laptop and phone at the same time, and support for the Sony Sound Connect app to tweak EQ, modes, and other settings. Touch controls on the buds handle playback, calls, and cycling through sound modes with taps and triple-taps, and you still get access to your preferred voice assistant. The buds carry an IPX4 rating, which is essentially “fine in the rain or during sweaty walks” but not something you’d want to dunk in a pool.
Price-wise, Sony slides into the upper midrange at around $229.99, undercutting the roughly $299.99 Bose Ultra Open earbuds while landing above the $199.95 Shokz OpenDots and more budget-friendly options like Soundcore’s AeroClip at about $149.99. That positions LinkBuds Clip Open as a kind of “premium but not flagship” option: more refined and feature-packed than the cheaper open-ear sets, but not as aggressively high-end as Bose’s fashion-forward offering. For people who live inside Sony’s ecosystem or simply like its tuning, that middle ground may be exactly where they want to land.
So, who are these actually for? Think runners and cyclists who want situational awareness without the clamp of over-ears, office workers who hate the isolated feel of ANC but still want background playlists, and remote workers jumping between calls and music all day. They’re also interesting for anyone who wears glasses or jewelry and finds earhooks annoying, since the clip-on design minimizes interference around the temples and ear edges. If traditional earbuds constantly fall out, the Clip Open’s wraparound approach might finally give you a stable, all-day option that doesn’t feel like a compromise.
The bigger story, though, is what products like the LinkBuds Clip Open say about where personal audio is headed. After a decade of chasing deeper isolation and more aggressive noise cancellation, we’re now seeing a strong countertrend: devices that are built to coexist with real life instead of blocking it out. Clip-on open earbuds are less about disappearing into your own world and more about layering your audio on top of it, and Sony’s take adds some smart quality-of-life features, like leakage control and strong call handling, to make that blend feel intentional rather than like a downgrade.
If you’re the kind of person who has always ripped tips off earbuds or turned ANC off because it feels too isolating, Sony’s first clip-on open earbuds are basically an invitation to stop fighting your gear. They won’t be for everyone – bass heads and travelers who rely on heavy isolation will still prefer sealed in-ears or over-ear ANC – but for a growing group of listeners who want awareness, comfort, and “good enough” privacy, the LinkBuds Clip Open make a pretty strong case.
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