Skip to main content

Digital Trends may earn a commission when you buy through links on our site. Why trust us?

Microsoft Surface Earbuds vs. Amazon Echo Buds: Two takes on true wireless

The Amazon Echo Buds and Microsoft Surface Earbuds are two of the latest true wireless earbuds to have been announced, yet only one of them can be yours right now. This creates a bit of a predicament: Do you head over to Amazon’s website and order the Echo Buds, or wait until Microsoft blesses us with the Surface Earbuds in 2020? It’s tough to say, really.

While the Amazon Echo Buds performed better than expected and took home a stellar 4.5 out of 5 stars score in our full review, there’s a chance the Surface Earbuds could outperform them when they eventually hit the shelves. So if you’re torn between the two, your best bet is to look at how they compare on paper, since we can’t compare them in the real world just yet.

Price

Amazon Echo Buds closeup
Jennifer McGrath/Digital Trends

Let’s start with the one factor that will make up a lot of people’s minds right away. The Amazon Echo Buds sell for $130. That’s cheaper than the AirPods without the fancy Wireless Charging Case, and in fact, they’re less expensive than most of the well-known brands of true wireless earbuds. The Microsoft Surface Earbuds are almost at the far end of the price spectrum at $249. That’s a whopping $119 difference, making the Surface Earbuds 84% more expensive than the Echo Buds. As we get into the features, it’s quite possible the Microsoft earbuds will justify their hefty price tag, but for now, the Echo Buds are the better deal.

Winner: Amazon Echo Buds

Battery life

Image used with permission by copyright holder

True wireless earbuds can’t be used with an analog cable when their batteries die, so battery life should be a top consideration when buying. The Microsoft Surface Earbuds have a total playtime of 24 hours when you include the juice in their charging case, which is lower than average these days. On the other hand, they can last for eight hours between trips back to the charging case, which is excellent and represents a full day for a lot of folks.

The Echo Buds will go for 25 hours with the charging case included, but critically, they only make it five hours between charges. That would have been good in 2018, but we’re now nearing the end of 2019 and we can clearly expect more. The Surface Earbuds handily take this category.

Winner: Microsoft Surface Earbuds

Design

Amazon Echo Buds on ear
Jennifer McGrath/Digital Trends

It’s far too early to render an opinion on how well each of these products is designed from a usability point of view, but we can certainly judge them on aesthetics. Amazon’s Echo Buds take the tried-and-true approach of delivering a small set of black devices that more or less disappear when inserted in your ear. You might even call them bland or generic-looking.

The Microsoft Surface Earbuds, on the other hand, are impossible to miss unless you cover them with long hair. Their large, flat outer disc surfaces call attention to themselves in a way that no other true wireless earbuds do. One might be prepared to accept their design as the price of the features they offer, but we can’t imagine it will be a selling point on its own.

We should probably be encouraging design risk-taking from normally conservative Microsoft, but not this time.

Winner: Amazon Echo Buds

Special features and voice assistants

So what can these two very different wireless earbuds actually do?

Amazon has designed the Echo with two main features in mind: Listening to music and interacting with Alexa. They have three mics in each earbud and use Bose technology for active noise reduction. You can adjust the level of noise reduction from maximum to off with just a few taps, and you can summon Alexa (or Google Assistant or Siri) completely hands-free. The Echo Buds work with a wide variety of music services out of the box, including Amazon Music, Spotify, and Apple Music.

The Surface Earbuds are meant for music too, with easy access to Spotify built-in, but Microsoft has aimed this product at businesspeople. They’re designed to let you interact with Office 365 using your voice (dictation, real-time presentation captioning, real-time caption translation), and your fingers (various touch gestures let you control PowerPoint presentations). Curiously, despite having Cortana, Microsoft has said nothing about talking to its voice assistant (or anyone else’s) via the Surface Earbuds. There’s also no noise reduction or cancellation — another odd choice given that the Surface Headphones offer both features.

Unless you’re a frequent presenter of PowerPoint slide shows, we think the Echo Buds’ feature set will be a lot more useful.

Winner: Amazon Echo Buds

Conclusion

Are we declaring an overall winner? Nope, not yet. The proof is always in how a product works and, so far, we’ve only put one pair of these true wireless earbuds through our usual torture tests, so it would be unfair to declare a winner. When the other pair come across our desk, we’ll be back to update this showdown with our final decision. Until then, one thing is already clear: The Amazon Echo Buds, with their price, design, and feature set, are more attractive to the average consumer — and they’re holding their own in the real world.

Editors' Recommendations

Simon Cohen
Contributing Editor, A/V
Simon Cohen covers a variety of consumer technologies, but has a special interest in audio and video products, like spatial…
V-Moda’s first true wireless earbuds come with tons of fit options
V-Moda Hexamove Lite true wireless earbuds.

V-Moda has released its first true wireless earbuds, called the Hexamove. There are two versions of the earbuds, including the $170 Hexamove Pro, which come with a variety of accessories for customizing their fit, fashion, and function. Then there are the $130 Hexamove Lite, which are identical to the Pro, except that they don't come with the extra accessories. Both are available starting today, October 12, at Amazon and other retailers.

Unlike other brands of true wireless earbuds that have started to cram in every imaginable feature -- like active noise cancellation, in-ear detection, transparency mode, and wireless charging -- V-Moda appears to be trying to differentiate the Hexamove with a unique style and the ability to customize both the look and the fit.

Read more
Sony delivers the $100 WF-C500, its most affordable set of true wireless earbuds
Sony WF-C500 true wireless earbuds and case sitting on a table..

Sony, a company that has historically made very capable but very expensive true wireless earbuds, is now heading into more affordable territory with the $100 WF-C500, a set of earbuds that compete with Jabra's $80 Elite 3. Sony's previous lowest-priced earbuds were the $130 WF-XB700. It also announced its latest full-size noise-canceling wireless headphones, the $250 WH-XB910N. Both models are available for pre-order today at Sony.com, Amazon, and Best Buy.

Compared to Sony's other true wireless offerings like the WF-1000XM3, WF-1000XM4, and WF-SP800N, all of which possess advanced features like active noise cancellation (ANC), transparency mode, in-ear detection, built-in Google Assistant and Amazon Alexa, and in the case of the XM4, wireless charging, the C500 are relatively bare-bones. They're still compatible with Sony's Headphones app, and they benefit from Sony's Digitial Sound Enhancement Engine (DSEE), which helps to restore lost high-frequencies in compressed digital music. But otherwise, there are few bells or whistles.

Read more
Yamaha’s $100 TW-E3B true wireless earbuds are its smallest yet
Woman wearing Yamaha's TW-E3B true wireless earbuds.

Yamaha has a new set of true wireless earbuds that it claims are the smallest ones it has ever made. The $100 TW-E3B pick up where the TW-E3A left off, with tons of color options (black, green, gray, blue, pink, and purple) and a size and shape that the company says is 25% smaller than the previous model. You'll be able to buy the TW-E3B in late October.

Other than the new color options and smaller size, there doesn't appear to be much difference between the old and new models, which explains why Yamaha simply called the new edition "E3B," instead of giving it a whole new model number. In fact, if the colors and size don't matter to you, you can now buy the E3A at a significant discount -- Yamaha has dropped the price on the older version from $130 to just $50, a savings that presumably will only stick around until all remaining E3A inventory is gone.

Read more