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Tech

JBL Live 780NC and 680NC launch with LDAC and adaptive noise cancelling

Over ear or on ear, JBL’s latest Live duo aims to outlast your longest days with smarter noise cancelling and hi-res wireless sound.

By
Shubham Sawarkar
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ByShubham Sawarkar
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I’m a tech enthusiast who loves exploring gadgets, trends, and innovations. With certifications in CISCO Routing & Switching and Windows Server Administration, I bring a sharp...
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Mar 15, 2026, 6:29 AM EDT
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JBL Live 780NC on-ear headphones
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If you’ve been waiting for a good excuse to retire your beat‑up daily driver headphones, JBL just handed you two. The company has launched a fresh pair of Live‑series cans — the over‑ear JBL Live 780NC and the on‑ear JBL Live 680NC — aimed squarely at people who want “wear‑them‑all‑day” comfort, smarter noise cancelling, and a little bit of style flex, without paying flagship money.

Both models debut this week alongside SXSW, where JBL is showing them off in a “Livebrary” listening space in Austin, which kind of tells you how the brand wants you to think about these: everyday lifestyle headphones that still take sound seriously, not just another airport impulse buy.

At the heart of both the Live 780NC and 680NC are 40mm dynamic drivers tuned for JBL’s familiar “Signature Sound,” now paired with LDAC support for hi‑res wireless audio on compatible devices. That means if you’re streaming from a modern Android phone or another LDAC‑capable source, you can squeeze more detail out of high‑bitrate tracks than with the usual SBC/AAC combo. JBL is also layering in its JBL Spatial Sound 3.0 tech, which is essentially its own take on virtualized surround: not quite the full head‑tracking theater gimmick you get on some premium cans, but enough to make movies and certain mixes feel less “stuck in your skull” and more like they’re happening in front of you.

  • JBL Live 780NC on-ear headphones
  • JBL Live 680NC on-ear headphones

Noise-cancelling is one of the big talking points. Both headphones feature True Adaptive Noise Cancelling 2.0, which uses onboard mics and upgraded processing to constantly adjust to your surroundings in real time. The Live 780NC gets six microphones dedicated to ANC, while the 680NC uses four, so the over‑ear model is technically the more powerful option on paper. JBL says it has retrained its ANC algorithms with AI to be more accurate about what it kills and what it lets through, which should mean less of that weird pressure feeling and fewer sudden shifts when you move from, say, a quiet street into a noisy metro.

Call quality gets similar AI treatment. Both models have JBL’s 2‑Mic Perfect Calls 2.0 setup with two beamforming microphones and an AI‑trained algorithm to dial down background chatter. There’s also a Call Equalizer and a Sound Level Optimizer, which aim to keep your voice intelligible and at a stable volume even if you’re jumping between quiet office corners and busy sidewalks. On paper, this positions the Live series as not just “music first,” but also a practical work‑from‑anywhere and commute solution, something a lot of midrange headphones struggle to balance.

Battery life is where JBL is clearly trying to out‑spec some of the household names. Both the Live 780NC and 680NC promise up to 80 hours of playback with ANC off, or about 50 hours with ANC enabled, which is significantly higher than many similarly priced rivals that hover in the 30–40 hour range with cancellation on. There’s also a very handy “Speed Charge” feature: a five‑minute top‑up over USB‑C can net you around four hours of listening, the kind of safety net that saves you when you realize your headphones are dead just as you’re about to leave for a flight.

Design‑wise, JBL has pushed a full refresh instead of a minor facelift. Both models go for a slimmer, lighter, more streamlined look with metallic accents and a fully foldable design that should play nicely with cramped backpacks. Soft‑touch ear cushions (over‑ear on the 780NC, on‑ear pads on the 680NC) are meant to support the “all day” promise, and the color palette is much less boring than the typical black‑or‑nothing: you can pick from Green, Blue, Champagne, White, or Black on both. It’s clear JBL wants these to read as lifestyle accessories as much as audio gear, especially for people who are tired of seeing the same matte dark gray on every head in a coffee shop.

On the interaction side, JBL is giving you both a customizable hardware button and touch controls, so you can map shortcuts like ANC toggling, voice assistant access, or other quick actions to match your habits. The headphones plug into the JBL Headphones app, where you get Personi‑Fi 3.0 — JBL’s personalized sound feature that adapts the audio profile to your hearing — along with EQ tweaks and control customization. Features like Low Volume EQ and Personal Sound Amplification are also present on the Live 780NC, aimed at keeping things full and detailed even when you’re listening quietly or want to boost certain frequencies in your environment.

The two models essentially differ in form factor and a bit of spec nuance rather than philosophy. The Live 780NC is the more premium over‑ear option, with those six ANC mics, the full feature set (including Personal Sound Amplification and Low Volume EQ), and a price tag of $249.95 in the US. The Live 680NC, meanwhile, is the more compact on‑ear take with four ANC mics, a slightly simplified audio feature list, and a friendlier $159.95 price. Both share the same battery claims, same color options, and the same core platform of LDAC, Adaptive ANC 2.0, Spatial Sound 3.0, and app integration, so you’re mainly choosing between fit preference and how much you want to spend.

Zooming out, it’s pretty clear what JBL is doing here. Instead of chasing the ultra‑premium $300+ ANC crowd, the company is leaning into a kind of “upper‑midrange sweet spot”: long battery life, modern codecs, genuinely useful ANC, and a design that looks current, all priced below a lot of flagship cans. For commuters, students, and hybrid workers who live in headphones for hours at a stretch, the promise here is simple: fewer battery anxiety moments, less fiddling with controls, and a sound profile that can shift from podcasts and Zoom calls to late‑night playlists without feeling like a compromise.

If you were to boil it down, the JBL Live 780NC is aimed at people who want maximum isolation and comfort for long sessions, while the Live 680NC is for those who prefer a lighter, more compact on‑ear design and a lower entry price but still want modern ANC and hi‑res wireless built in. In both cases, JBL is betting that “listen all day, every way” isn’t just a tagline — it’s how you actually use your headphones now.


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