Soundcore is finally giving its crowd‑favorite budget headphones a proper sequel, and it’s arriving right in the middle of the chaos of MWC 2026 in Barcelona. The new Soundcore Space 2 lands in the US on April 21st, priced at $129.99 and available in three finishes — linen white, jet black, and a pastel‑leaning seafoam green that feels tailor‑made for Instagram shots from airport lounges.
If you’ve followed Soundcore’s headphones over the last few years, you’ll know just how often the Space One have shown up on “best budget ANC” lists, especially for folks who didn’t want to spend Sony or Bose money. The Space 2 isn’t trying to reinvent that formula so much as tighten it up: better noise cancellation where it matters, longer battery life, and some quieter, under‑the‑hood changes to sound and comfort. In exchange, there’s also a bump in price — about 30 dollars more than the original Space One at launch — which nudges them out of the ultra‑cheap bracket and into the “serious budget” territory where competition has gotten pretty fierce.
The headline upgrade is active noise cancellation, and Soundcore is very clearly positioning the Space 2 as travel headphones first, everything else second. Rather than chasing specs on paper, the company says it focused on low‑frequency noise — the steady drone of airplane engines, the rumble of train tracks, the growl of a bus — the exact stuff that makes you crank your volume just to drown the world out. The mic count stays the same versus the Space One, but the microphones have been repositioned and the internal structure and materials have been reworked so the system can better attack that low‑end noise. Some early hands‑on impressions suggest the new four‑stage ANC system does a surprisingly solid job in loud show‑floor conditions, even if it still doesn’t quite hit Bose or Sony levels.
Audio hardware has had its own revamp. Inside each earcup, you now get redesigned 40mm drivers built around a dual‑layer diaphragm: silk paired with metal ceramic. In plain language, that combo is meant to help the drivers react faster to sharp transients — drum hits, sudden synth stabs, percussive details — while keeping the overall balance more controlled and less shouty than cheaper cans that lean too hard on bass or treble. Reviewers who have tried early units describe a sound that is rich in bass, with clear highs and a generally clean, crowd‑pleasing tuning that you can then tweak further in Soundcore’s app. Like the Space One, the Space 2 still supports LDAC for high‑res audio, which is a nice win if you’re pairing them with a compatible Android phone and actually streaming higher‑bit‑rate tracks.
Battery life is where the Space 2 starts to feel a bit ridiculous for the price. With ANC turned on, Soundcore claims up to 50 hours on a single charge; turn ANC off, and that number climbs to a huge 70 hours. Those figures pull them well clear of a lot of similarly priced rivals and even some more expensive pairs. A quick‑charge top‑up is built in as well: five minutes on the cable is supposed to give you around four additional hours of listening, which is the kind of “oh no, my flight boards in 20 minutes” safety net that actually matters in real life.

For connectivity, Soundcore is stepping into the future without going all the way. The Space 2 uses Bluetooth 6.1 for wireless audio, which should bring good stability and efficiency, and there’s still a 3.5mm jack for when you want or need a wired connection — think in‑flight entertainment systems or latency‑sensitive gaming. What you don’t get is Auracast, the new broadcast streaming feature that’s slowly starting to appear across the industry; that omission might sting a bit if you were hoping to jump on multi‑listener streams in airports and public spaces as that ecosystem grows.
The software features are where Soundcore leans hardest into quality‑of‑life perks. HearID 3.0 returns, letting you run a short listening test inside the app so it can build a personalized sound profile based on your hearing. On Space One, that system already did a decent job of smoothing out harsh highs and nudging the sound closer to what individual listeners preferred, and the same idea carries over here. There’s also Smart Wearing Detection, which uses sensors to automatically pause your audio when you take the headphones off and resume when you put them back on, so you’re not constantly jabbing at buttons or your phone just to have a quick conversation. For calls, Soundcore is adding AI‑assisted noise reduction on the microphones to help keep your voice intelligible over background noise — useful if you’re taking meetings in busy spaces.
Comfort and design haven’t been radically overhauled, but they’ve clearly been tuned with long sessions in mind. The Space 2 stick with an ergonomic over‑ear design, supported by soft memory foam padding that aims to distribute pressure evenly over longer listening marathons, whether that’s a transatlantic flight or just an entire workday spent in a coffee shop. The color palette — the clean linen white, stealthy jet black, and that more playful seafoam green — gives them a bit more personality than generic black office cans without veering into “gaming headset” territory. One lingering frustration from the previous generation remains, though: instead of a rigid case, you still only get a matching cloth bag. It looks nice, but if you’re the type who tosses headphones into a backpack with chargers, laptops, and keys, that softer pouch isn’t going to offer much in the way of real protection.
All of this lands in a much more competitive market than when Space One debuted. At around $130, the Space 2 are rubbing shoulders with aggressive budget offerings from Sony, EarFun, JLab, and plenty of smaller brands that now deliver surprisingly capable ANC and battery life for well under $200. The gamble Soundcore is making is that its mix of upgraded low‑frequency noise cancelation, genuinely strong stamina, LDAC support, and a polished app experience will be enough to keep the Space line firmly planted on “best budget” lists for another generation.
If you look at the trajectory from Space One to Space 2, the story is less about flashy headline features and more about refinement. Travelers get stronger isolation from the most annoying parts of a journey, commuters get a battery that can comfortably last for days, and more demanding listeners still get higher‑quality codecs and tuning options without being forced into flagship pricing. The missing hard case and lack of Auracast keep the Space 2 from feeling truly “no‑brainer perfect,” but if the real‑world ANC and comfort live up to the early impressions, Soundcore may have just quietly reset the bar for what budget over‑ear ANC headphones should look like in 2026.
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