Bang & Olufsen has never been subtle about selling sound as an experience, not a commodity. But with the Beo Grace — a pair of true wireless earbuds that start at $1,500 (or £1,000 / €1,200) — the Danish audio house takes that philosophy to a new, almost performative extreme. The company is asking buyers to pay more for earbuds than many people spend on a phone or a laptop, and it has wrapped the request in high-design flourishes, bespoke materials and a long warranty.
Design with the price tag stamped on it
If you want the headline: the Beo Grace comes in a Natural Aluminium finish with a pearl-like sheen and slim, metal stems — a visual callback to B&O’s A8 earphones — that the company says are “inspired by the elegance of fine jewelry.” The charging case is also aluminum, and you can opt for a handcrafted Italian leather pouch in colors like Cranberry Red, Seashell Grey, or Infinite Black for an extra premium feel — a pouch that will add roughly $300–$400 to your bill, depending on region. On paper, it’s a product that trades mainstream ubiquity for exclusivity.
Specs, and the compromises in the fine print
Bang & Olufsen is pitching Beo Grace as an acoustic distillation of its higher-end over-ear work. The earbuds use 12mm titanium drivers and are tuned with the same “acoustic principles” B&O points to in its Beoplay H100 headphones; they also support Dolby Atmos spatial audio. For active noise cancellation (ANC), the company leans on an “Adaptive ANC” system that’s driven by a six-microphone array and on-device intelligence to shift how much suppression is applied in real time. That’s the technical case for the price.
But there are trade-offs: battery life with ANC active is rated at 4.5 hours per charge, and the charging case adds roughly another 12.5 hours for a combined total B&O quotes of about 17 hours. That runtime is below what many competing premium buds offer for the money, though B&O says it worked with a battery-intelligence partner to make the cells last — claiming more than 2,000 charge cycles in internal testing. If you’re a commuter who wants daylong listening without interruptions, that battery number matters more than the brushed metal finish.
Tactility, controls and features
Where Beo Grace attempts to differentiate beyond materials is in how it feels to use. Bang & Olufsen highlights tactile, mechanical-feel controls — “crisp, deliberate and satisfying,” in marketing parlance — and a “NearTap” style of interaction for volume, alongside standard features like transparency mode, multipoint Bluetooth, LC3 support and USB-C/wireless charging. The case also doubles as a transmitter via USB-C or line-in, which makes the kit useful with in-flight entertainment systems or hotel TVs that don’t support Bluetooth — a small practicality that reads like a wink at well-heeled travellers.

Who is this for? (And who should pause)
At $1,500, the Beo Grace is a statement product. It’s aimed squarely at style-focused audiophiles and B&O loyalists who value industrial design, finish and the cachet of an elite brand as much as the raw audio numbers. If you’re after the best ANC per dollar or longest battery life, the market has more practical choices: it’s easy to point to alternatives that deliver similar or better run-time and comparable noise suppression for a fraction of the price. But if you collect objet d’art audio and want earbuds that look — and deliberately feel — like jewelry, the Grace is doing precisely what it set out to do.
Warranty, availability and the bottom line
Preorders are open now on Bang & Olufsen’s site, and shipping begins on November 17, 2025. The Beo Grace comes with up to a three-year warranty and a 30-day trial window, which softens the financial sting a bit: when you’re paying $1,500 for earbuds, you want the safety net of longer support and the option to return. Still, there’s no escaping that this is a niche play — an attempt to turn an everyday accessory into a collectible.
Final note: value is personal
Judging value is inherently subjective. Some readers will see the Grace and think of them as proof that audio can still be crafted with old-world attention to finishing and industrial design. Others will see overpriced earbuds and wonder whether heritage branding excuses a steep premium for incremental gains. Either reaction is valid — and if history is any guide, Bang & Olufsen knows exactly which side of that debate its customers will sit on.
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