Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Phones
  3. News

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

Samsung Galaxy Buds 4 beat the AirPods at high quality audio, but it is quite exclusive

Ultra High Quality audio reaches 24-bit/96 kHz, but only a handful of Galaxy devices can use it.

Add as a preferred source on Google
Samsung Galaxy Buds 4 Internals
Samsung

Samsung’s Galaxy Buds 4 have quietly introduced a feature that could put them ahead of Apple’s AirPods in one key area: high-resolution wireless audio. The new earbuds support Ultra High Quality (UHQ) audio up to 24-bit / 96 kHz, a spec that edges into the territory traditionally reserved for wired headphones and dedicated hi-fi gear.

On paper, that is a big deal. Most wireless earbuds compress audio heavily due to Bluetooth bandwidth limits. Apple’s AirPods, for example, still rely on the AAC codec, which prioritizes stability and efficiency over lossless playback. Samsung’s UHQ feature, meanwhile, aims to deliver higher-resolution audio with more detail, wider dynamic range, and improved clarity.

But there’s a catch…

Samsung’s own documentation confirms that UHQ audio only works with select Galaxy devices running One UI 6.1.1 or newer. At launch, support is limited to newer flagship phones and tablets, including the Galaxy S26, S25, S24, S23 series, recent Galaxy Z Fold and Flip devices, and select Galaxy Tab models. The feature is also turned off by default and must be manually enabled in settings.

Just as Apple keeps its best AirPods features tied to iPhones, Samsung is reserving UHQ audio for its own latest Galaxy hardware. If you pair the Galaxy Buds 4 with a non-Samsung phone or an older Galaxy device, you will still get regular Bluetooth audio, but not the flagship UHQ experience. To be fair, the exclusivity makes technical sense. Delivering 24-bit / 96 kHz audio over Bluetooth requires tight hardware and software integration, including support for Samsung’s proprietary codec and newer Bluetooth implementations. Still, it means the headline feature is not universally accessible, even for Android users.

For Galaxy users with compatible devices, though, the payoff could be real. Wireless audio has been inching closer to wired quality for years, and UHQ support is another step in that direction. It may not be a universal win just yet, but within its own ecosystem, Samsung has clearly raised the bar. If this is the direction wireless audio is heading, the competition is only going to get more interesting from here.

Varun Mirchandani
Varun is an experienced technology journalist and editor with over eight years in consumer tech media. His work spans…
Leaked iPhone 18 Pro motherboard hints at Apple’s next cooling upgrade
A new motherboard image claims Apple is redesigning the A20 Pro's packaging for better thermal performance.
iPhone 18 Pro cameras

A fresh iPhone 18 Pro leak is making the rounds online, and it comes with some pretty bold claims. According to leaker Reptalicant, the alleged motherboard for Apple's upcoming flagship reveals a redesigned A20 Pro chip package with improved cooling, a beefier Neural Engine, and faster memory. That's a lot to unpack, especially considering motherboard-level Apple leaks like this are exceptionally rare.

The leak claims better thermals, faster memory, and a stronger NPU

Read more
Finding Android apps on the Google Play Store just got a lot easier thanks to Gemini
Google's AI assistant now works directly with the Play Store to recommend and install apps.
Google Play Store Photo

Google is making Gemini even more useful on Android. Google first previewed the Google Play connected app for Gemini at Google I/O 2026, and it's now finally rolling out to users. The new integration brings the Play Store directly into Gemini, letting the AI assistant help discover apps, make purchases, and complete more tasks without leaving the chat.

Gemini can now do more than recommend apps

Read more
It looks like Apple will treat you to a $200 price hike on the iPhone 18 Pro, after all
The Mac price hike told us a lot about what's coming for the iPhone 18 Pro, and IDC is now putting a number on it.
iPhone 17 Pro

Apple's Mac and iPad prices went up this week, by a good margin, no less, and the memory crisis behind them isn't going anywhere anytime soon. 

The obvious next question is what happens to the iPhone 18 Pro, which is expected to arrive later this year. IDC has an answer, and you might not like it (via MacRumors).

Read more