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The PowerBeats Pro 2 arrive six years after the original model, bringing a long-awaited refresh for fitness-focused users. You get lighter earbuds, improved comfort, better sound, wireless charging, active noise cancellation, and even built-in heart-rate sensors. On paper this looks like the ultimate gym earbud upgrade — but in real-world use, several decisions hold it back from being the perfect successor.
The most defining feature of the PowerBeats Pro lineup is the ear hook. While most modern earbuds rely on in-ear tips alone, these hooks give a locked-in fit that refuses to budge during running, lifting, cycling, or inverted movements. The hooks aren’t bendable; they simply curve over the ear and stay in place.
The inner ear tips use a firmer rubber than Apple’s AirPods Pro 2. The seal feels similar in comfort but is clearly designed for sweat-heavy workouts. Five tip sizes are included for precise fit. Physical controls remain a huge advantage — both earbuds have volume buttons and mode controls, which are far more reliable than touch surfaces when you’re moving.
AirPods Pro 2 still hold the “best all-rounder” title for wireless earbud audio, but the PowerBeats Pro 2 deliver a very intentional Beats-style profile. Expect a V-shaped signature: boosted bass, bright treble, lively energy. It’s fun, punchy, and excellent for gym motivation, even if it’s not studio-flat accuracy.
Mic quality is similar to AirPods Pro 2 — clear enough for calls but not standout.
Apple’s H2 chip powers ANC, transparency, and spatial audio. Performance is mixed:
ANC strength:
– Great for constant background noise (treadmills, AC units, airplane hum)
– Roughly “8 out of 10” compared to AirPods Pro 2
ANC weakness:
– Very poor handling of sudden impacts like weight drops, bar slams, machine clanks
– Surprisingly worse than AirPods Pro 2 despite using the same chip
This is disappointing because fitness earbuds need strong suppression of chaotic noise — and this is exactly where they fall short.
Each earbud has an optical heart rate sensor on the underside. Accuracy is impressive — typically within 1–2 BPM of a Polar chest strap — but actual usability is awkward.
To check your heart rate, you must:
It’s not instant, not integrated into iOS like Apple Watch, and only works with a few apps. The friction makes it feel like a feature that sounds great but gets used rarely.
Heart rate monitoring also drains battery significantly faster — up to several hours less runtime.
The new case is smaller than before but still larger than typical earbud cases. It finally uses USB-C and wireless charging, and the magnetic docking system is dramatically improved. You can drop the earbuds in casually and they connect instantly — even upside down. No more fiddling or reseating like the original model.
Battery life is excellent:
– 10 hours per charge
– Up to 45 hours including the case
For workout earbuds, this is top-tier endurance.
Strengths
– Rock-solid fit for intense movement
– Fun, energetic sound signature
– Physical buttons perfect for workouts
– Long battery life
– Reliable magnetic charging
– Sweat-friendly build
Weaknesses
– ANC struggles with sudden noise — big flaw for gym use
– Heart rate feature feels unnecessary and inconvenient
– Pricing is out of step with the competition
– Strong alternatives exist at $100 less
At $249 USD, the same price as the original model’s launch six years ago, the PowerBeats Pro 2 feel expensive in today’s crowded market. Numerous fitness-oriented earbuds under $150 offer similar durability, strong sound, and equal or better ANC.
The question becomes: Is the heart rate sensor worth a premium?
For most users — no.
The PowerBeats Pro 2 bring meaningful upgrades in comfort, charging, and battery life, but fall short where it matters most for fitness earbuds: noise cancellation and practical workout features. The sound is fun, the fit is exceptional, and the physical buttons are perfect — but ANC inconsistency and a cumbersome heart-rate system leave the product feeling stuck between great hardware and confusing priorities.
A strong update, but not the definitive workout earbud Apple easily could have delivered.