Apple and Nike have quietly dropped a collab that feels tailor‑made for people who live in their workout gear: the special‑edition Nike Powerbeats Pro 2 are now officially on sale, with the same internals as the standard model but a much louder, more aggressive look and a clear focus on performance athletes.
On paper, these are still the Powerbeats Pro 2 that launched last year — a fitness‑first alternative to AirPods Pro 3, with wraparound earhooks, active noise cancelling, Transparency mode, and a battery life number that almost looks like a typo: up to 45 hours when you factor in the charging case. What Nike brings to the table here is attitude. Each earbud comes in a two‑tone mix of black and Volt, Nike’s signature high‑visibility neon that’s been a staple on everything from Vaporflys to football boots, and the branding is split: one side keeps Beats’ familiar “b” while the other swaps it out for the Nike Swoosh. Even the case is part of the story, with a Volt splatter pattern and a “JUST DO IT” hit printed on the inside that you’ll see every time you flip it open before a run or gym session.
Underneath that shell, though, this is very much a modern Apple audio product wearing a Nike kit. Powerbeats Pro 2 runs on Apple’s H2 chip – the same silicon inside AirPods Pro 2 – which unlocks a bunch of quality‑of‑life upgrades: more efficient active noise cancellation, an improved Transparency mode, faster and more stable Bluetooth connectivity, and support for features like Personalized Spatial Audio with dynamic head tracking on Apple devices. The acoustic architecture has been reworked versus the original Powerbeats Pro, with updated venting and tuning that leans into a punchy, energetic sound signature that suits high‑tempo playlists and gym‑floor EDM more than soft background listening.

Where these really differentiate themselves from AirPods Pro – and most mainstream earbuds – is in how deeply they lean into fitness tracking. Built into each earbud is an optical heart‑rate sensor that fires light hundreds of times per second to read blood flow, feeding live heart‑rate data and calorie estimates into compatible fitness apps. On iPhone, that data can plug directly into Apple’s Fitness app, while Nike’s own messaging highlights tight integration with Nike Run Club and other training platforms, effectively turning your earbuds into a tiny heart‑rate strap you never have to remember to put on. If you don’t care about biometrics, you can switch the heart‑rate monitoring off, but for people who like to keep an eye on zones during intervals or track progress without a watch, this is one of the most compelling reasons these exist.
Of course, all of that only matters if the earbuds actually stay in place when you’re sweating through burpees or doing long runs, and that’s still the Powerbeats calling card. The wraparound earhooks have been rebuilt using a super‑light nickel‑titanium alloy, which is usually the kind of material you see in high‑end eyewear, thanks to its flexibility and shape memory. The result is a secure, locked‑in feel that typical stem‑style buds struggle to match, especially for people who’ve had AirPods work their way loose mid‑run. You also get an IPX4 rating for sweat and splash resistance, so these are clearly meant for gym bags and outdoor workouts, not just commuting.
Battery life is another big part of the pitch. Beats and Apple rate Powerbeats Pro 2 at up to 10 hours of continuous listening on a single charge, with the case stretching that to as much as 45 hours before you need to find a charger. A quick 5‑minute top‑up in the case can net around 90 minutes of playback, which is exactly the kind of “oh no, I forgot to charge before my run” safety net that actually changes how you use them day‑to‑day. The case itself supports both Qi wireless charging and USB‑C, so it’ll play nicely with the same charging pads and cables you already use for your phone.
The rest of the experience will feel familiar if you’ve used recent Beats or AirPods. There are physical volume rockers and on‑ear buttons on each bud, so you can adjust volume, pause, or skip tracks without jabbing at tiny touch surfaces mid‑rep. A trio of upgraded microphones per earbud, along with a voice accelerometer, handle calls and voice commands, with Apple claiming better signal‑to‑noise performance and voice isolation than any previous Beats model. Class 1 Bluetooth means stronger range and fewer dropouts, and while these naturally work best in Apple’s ecosystem with instant pairing and iCloud syncing, Android users still get standard Bluetooth support and access to heart‑rate data through supported apps.
What might surprise some people is that Nike’s special edition is not priced as a premium upcharge. In the U.S., the Nike Powerbeats Pro 2 come in at $249.99, identical to the regular Powerbeats Pro 2, with early shipping estimates landing around March 24 for Apple Store orders.
Culturally, this drop also says a lot about where Beats sits right now. Beats has quietly become Apple’s sport and streetwear‑facing audio line, and teaming up with Nike – arguably the most recognizable name in performance apparel – feels like a natural extension of that identity. Nike is pushing the “block out the noise” story hard, even putting the buds in an ad with LeBron James to underline the idea that these aren’t just lifestyle accessories but gear that belongs on serious athletes. At the same time, the aggressive Volt‑on‑black colorway taps into sneakerhead culture; this looks like something you’d see dropped as a limited shoe colorway, not just a minor trim update on a pair of earbuds.
From a practical perspective, the Nike edition doesn’t fundamentally change what Powerbeats Pro 2 are: high‑end workout earbuds for people who care about a secure fit, long battery life, and integrated fitness tracking. If you already own the regular Powerbeats Pro 2, there’s no new feature here that you’re missing out on, so this is more about aesthetics and brand alignment than an upgrade path. But if you’ve been on the fence about picking up a pair and you gravitate toward Nike’s bold gear – or you’re just tired of earbuds that slip out halfway through your run – this might be the most tempting version yet, precisely because it doesn’t ask you to pay extra for the collab logo.
In the bigger picture, Powerbeats Pro 2 Nike Special Edition also hint at where workout audio is headed. Heart‑rate monitoring and biometric sensing are being baked directly into devices people already wear, whether that’s glasses, earbuds, or even necklaces, and it’s easy to imagine future versions pushing deeper into training analytics. For now, though, Beats and Nike are offering something simple but appealing: a pair of gym‑ready earbuds that can double as a lightweight fitness tracker, match your Volt‑accented running kit, and survive a week’s worth of training on a single case charge – without charging you a hype tax for the privilege.
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