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

NextSense wants your sleep fixed by EEG sleep earbuds, not apps

Smartbuds read your brain activity through six sensors and respond with sound at the right moments.

Add as a preferred source on Google
Face, Head, Person
NextSense

NextSense thinks you’re done with sleep apps that only grade your night after the fact. It launched Smartbuds, EEG sleep earbuds built around a different promise, the buds don’t just measure sleep, it claims they can improve it while you’re still asleep.

The pitch hinges on brain sensing. NextSense says Smartbuds use six EEG sensors to pick up brain activity, detect sleep stages and transitions in milliseconds, then trigger targeted audio stimulation aimed at supporting deeper sleep. That’s a sharper claim than most consumer wearables, which typically infer sleep from motion or heart rate.

Recommended Videos

NextSense also frames the system as something that learns you over time, adjusting night by night.

A tracker that pushes back

The headline feature is a closed-loop approach. NextSense describes the earbuds as continuously monitoring EEG signals, then responding with stimulation when the timing lines up, rather than waiting until morning to hand you a score.

It also wants EEG to feel effortless. Smartbuds are positioned as true wireless earbuds instead of a headband or wired setup, with the goal of making brain sensing something you’ll actually wear nightly.

The price and the catch

Smartbuds are priced at $399.99 at retail, with an early bird offer of $249. After the first three months, NextSense lists a Fit Kit subscription starting at $14.99 per month to keep using the system, so the long-term cost is part hardware, part service.

Phone support is limited for now. You need an iPhone 12 or newer running iOS 17 or later, which shuts out Android users and older iPhones unless compatibility expands. That reality makes the decision pretty simple, you’re buying into an ecosystem, not just a gadget.

Proof points to watch

To back up the promise, NextSense points to a controlled beta spanning 106 nights, reporting an average increase in slow-wave activity with Smartbuds. It also cites user-reported improvements in sleep quality, mood, energy, and focus, plus more than 1,400 nights of real-world data.

If you’re tempted, the practical move is to treat Smartbuds as a new class of EEG sleep earbuds and weigh the early bird price against the subscription. Watch for broader device support and outside validation, that’s when this shifts from bold claim to reliable sleep tool.

Paulo Vargas
Paulo Vargas is an English major turned reporter turned technical writer, with a career that has always circled back to…
Wearables are helping the elderly as record heat blasts across Europe
As Europe bakes, a simple bracelet is helping keep Rome’s elderly safe
Seremy is a watch being used in Rome for the elderly

Smartbands or smartwatches immediately make you think of some wearable built for keeping track of your health and physical activities. But in Rome, they are being used to help the elderly. The new watches are being deployed to senior citizens to help them stay safe during the dangerous heatwave that has swept across Europe.

According to Reuters, the city is using electronic bracelets as part of a €400 million support scheme for older residents. The program, backed by EU post-COVID funding, currently covers about 700 people.

Read more
Samsung’s upcoming Galaxy Watch Ultra 2 could get a blindingly bright display, but I’m worried about the tax
Samsung Galaxy Watch

If there’s one thing that annoys me about using a smartwatch outdoors, it’s squinting at the screen under bright sunlight. Whether I’m checking directions on a walk or glancing at a notification while cycling, a dim display can quickly turn a premium smartwatch into a guessing game.

That’s why the latest Galaxy Watch Ultra 2 leak immediately caught my attention. But after reading through it, I couldn’t shake one nagging thought: all these upgrades probably won’t come cheap.

Read more
Doctors built an AI stress pal that picks body signals form your smartwatch and earbuds
This AI therapy system prototype can spot when you need help even before you ask
AI therapist representative image generated using AI

There are already plenty of mental-health chatbots online, but they all run into the same problem. The user still has to reach out first. That is not always easy when someone is stressed, anxious, overwhelmed, or simply unsure how to put their feelings into words.

Researchers at the University of Ottawa are working on a different kind of AI assistant. It is designed to read emotional cues in real time through signals from devices people already use, including smartwatches, smartphones, and earbuds.

Read more