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Apple AirPods Pro 3: Two-minute review
Apple‘s AirPods Pro 3 are doubtless the biggest earbuds release of the year – figuratively and in terms of the furore surrounding them, that is, rather than physically (they’re nice and small, as it happens). They’re still ice-white only, and they’ll still prefer an iPhone, iPad or MacBook over an Android device any day of the week – yes, they’ll work with Android, but you’ll miss even some of the more commonplace perks if using them this way, such as device switching and a quick way of checking the battery.
This time around you get five ear tips in the box, although Apple has performed some wizardry with the shape of the driver housing, so they should slip right into your ear and stay there without too much fuss – at least they did for me, and for several others on the TechRadar team. Are these some of the best earbuds on the market for fit and novel features (I will mention heart-rate monitoring; I will also go into Live Translation at length, later) then, as well as claiming the best in-ear active noise cancellation? Oh, without a doubt.
These particular AirPods have very few snafus, but it’s my job to mention the small issues I had. My AirPods Pro 3 review sample has refused to acknowledge the existence of the iPhone 12 Pro Max I’ve tried to pair them with several times, on the grounds that said phone is a non-Apple Intelligence option, and performing a reset is now quite a bit more fiddly than it was previously. This is because the button on the back of the case is now gone. Instead, you have to double-tap the front of the case to do a factory reset, but without touching the front of the case while flipping the lid. If that sounds tricky, it is.
Also, there’s still a slight stamina niggle for me. Don’t get me wrong: Apple has improved the battery life here, claiming up to eight hours from the earbuds with ANC on, which is up from six hours for the AirPods Pro 2. But this, of course, is without Spatial Audio, heart-rate monitoring and a few other bells and whistles deployed (which you may not have checked before leaving the house, because without a dedicated app to click, some of these toggles feel buried away in your phone’s settings). I found the battery life a bit lower than that in real life, at around 5.5 hours in my testing, so it’s fine, rather than fantastic.
All of this aside, the AirPods Pro 3’s sound is both zealous and head-turning (especially with dynamic head-tracking on), bringing your music to your ears with panache and, hang it all, joy. And let me be clear: these ice-white buds can do this thanks largely to the neatest near-silent ANC performance I’ve ever experienced using an iPhone source device. And that’s worth this kind of money for your next long-haul flight – or heck, even your commute, as far as I’m concerned.
Apple AirPods Pro 3 review: Price and release date
- Released on September 9, 2025
- Priced $249 / £219 / AU$429
- Available in white or… white again
Both the inaugural AirPods Pro and the follow-up AirPods Pro 2 were priced at $249 / £249 / AU$399 when they first appeared, so the fact that AirPods Pro 3 came with a $249 price tag when they hit shelves on September 19 come as a surprise to nobody.
What is a touch odd is the quoted pricing in other regions, because the AirPods Pro 3 are priced £219 in the UK (I double-checked so you don’t have to) and AU$429. So, while they’re £30 cheaper in the UK, they’re AU$30 more expensive in Australia. I don’t make the rules…
On the one hand, plenty of the best wireless earbuds have risen in price in the last few years in line with inflation, but the fact that Apple made a point of hanging on at the same price as the original AirPods Pro from 2019 – in the US at least – and even reduced them in the UK, is quite surprising.
And the huge news is that because of this pricing, Apple’s flagship earbuds will actually come at the lower end of the premium earbuds market, depending on region. I know!
What of direct competition at the level? Your rivals are perhaps most pressingly the older AirPods Pro 2, which can now be yours for around $159 / £169 / AU$349, the Bowers & Wilkins Pi8 (which are a fair bit pricier, at $399 / £349 / AU$599), the Technics EAH-AZ100 which are $299 / £259 / AU$478 or perhaps the Bose QuietComfort Ultra Earbuds (2nd Gen) for $299 / £299 / AU$450.
So you see, Apple’s actually gone quite aggressive with the pricing here, when you look at it like that…
Apple AirPods Pro 3 review: Specs
|
Drivers |
‘Custom high-excursion’ Apple driver with new multiport acoustic architecture and revised driver angle |
|
Active noise cancellation |
Yes |
|
Battery life |
8 hours (buds, ANC on); 6.5 hours (buds, heart rate sensor on); 24 hours (case) |
|
Weight |
5.6g (buds); 44g (case) |
|
Connectivity |
Bluetooth 5.3 (H2 chip) |
|
Waterproofing |
IP57 |
Apple AirPods Pro 3 review: Features
- Heart-rate monitoring
- Live Translation is really fun (once set up)
- Your fitness app may not support HRM natively though
There are plenty of features here to get through folks, but I want to start on the one no other AirPods are getting any time soon: heart-rate monitoring. Simply by wearing them, that extra black little bar on the inside neck of the bud plus the built-in movement sensors can track 50 workout types with just AirPods Pro 3 – ie. no Apple Watch needed – to give you a heart-rate reading as long as you’re wearing at least one earbud.
According to Apple: “AirPods Pro 3 introduce a custom photoplethysmography (PPG) sensor that shines invisible infrared light pulsed at 256 times per second to measure light absorption in blood flow.”
Believe it or not, this is actually a different solution to the one found in the also-ticker-taking (and also made by Apple) Beats Powerbeats Pro 2, launched in February 2025. You need to be wearing both earbuds to get a reading there, because when you do, a green LED light sensor in each earpiece pulses over 100 times per second, then measures the light reflected back to calculate how many times your heart is beating per minute. See?
I had heard that my heavy-rotation free Seven app (of ‘seven-minute workout’ fame – because lunchtime is rarely the full hour in journalism) would simply work with AirPods Pro 3’s heart-rate monitoring in-app, but alas, it does not. In fact, at the time of writing, Apple hasn’t published a full list of third-party fitness apps that support AirPods’ heart-rate monitoring natively. But I still know that my heart-rate went up from its resting 60 BPM to 117 BPM during that short workout, because your reading can be found in the Health app – or you can simply ask Siri to tell you your heart rate whenever you like (once you’ve turned it on and sorted out the correct permissions within Siri) provided you’ve got the breath to speak.
Apple is clearly using AirPods’ newest trick to send you to its free Fitness app (or better still, its paid-for Fitness+ offering) because even in the free variant, 19 types of activity are clearly displayed with simple Apple Music integration, your AirPods icon in the top right, your choice of three ‘workout buddy’ voices for personalised encouragement using Apple Intelligence and a little heart icon as if to scream ‘heart-rate logging here folks – just get going!’ I’m a little disappointed to see no aerial silks/hoop or pole dance activities listed here, Apple (both are hugely popular) but this review is about AirPods Pro 3 rather than the suite of offerings within Fitness, and AirPods’ help in facilitating all of this data accumulation does add a lot of value to your purchase.
Now, Live Translation: once you get it up and running, it’s excellent. I say ‘once you get it up and running’ because there are various hoops you need to jump through and barriers to pass (and tricks I used) before it’ll work properly. And you should do these when you first set up your AirPods if you’d like to get at it quick enough so that when the time comes, the poor bar-tender you’re trying to talk to doesn’t get cold feet and run away while you’re telling them to hang on.
So, you need: your AirPods Pro 3 (although it is also available in AirPods 4 (ANC) and AirPods Pro 2); iPhone 15 Pro or later; iOS 26 or later; Apple Intelligence turned on; the Translate app downloaded (and the language modules you want downloaded) plus the latest AirPods Firmware version. In addition to this, I customised the iPhone Action button on my iPhone 15 Pro Max to start Live Translation – because I found it marginally quicker and more reliable than pressing both stems of my AirPods Pro 3. But do either of those things once you’ve got everything running and you’ll feel like James Bond in Casino Royale, dropping in on local gossip at the tables in Venice’s Hotel Danieli.
Luckily, I have a Spanish-speaking other half to deploy. He spoke to me about his plans to play tennis that night until 10pm (see the left screen-grab, below). The English version of his Spanish prose was piped vocally into my ears with very little delay, as well as appearing on my iPhone as a transcript. It is remarkably good.
Elsewhere, Apple’s fit- and hearing tests are back (you do the first, before you can take the second) and very thorough they are too. Since I answered the hearing test honestly (stay with it; it’s worth it), I cannot in good faith test the hearing aid help in action, because I do not require it. But what is very useful is Conversation Awareness, which you simply toggle on in the AirPods Pro tab of your iPhone’s settings. Then, when you talk, your music volume is lowered and background noise is reduced so that you can easily converse.
It’s worth noting that both of these features (Live Translation and Conversation Awareness) are not popular with some of the team, because they encourage wearing AirPods constantly – and some of us (myself included) find this rude. Perhaps in time the pet peeve of a friend or colleague refusing to remove their earbuds when talking to me will cease to annoy me, but I’m not so sure…
Apple AirPods Pro 3 review: Sound quality
- Enjoyable, emotive audio with personalised spatial audio on
- Vocals nicely textured and three-dimensional
- Not the last word in detail and neutrality, but that’s not the point
Please, please take Apple’s excellent ANC performance in the AirPods Pro 3 as read – it’s almost scarily good at sucking the noise out of your ears, but without the actual sucky, wind tunnel, nauseating effect you can sometimes get with similar levels of noise-nixing. I found toggling on Apple’s ‘Adaptive’ audio less effective (it felt just a touch laggy at picking up low-level noise when I’d have liked the AirPods to cancel it) so I chose to keep noise-cancelling and conversation awareness on, at my desk. And it eased me into my day in a cocoon of silence that very little could breach.
Sonically, you can expect an expansive, exuberant soundstage that allows bass registers ample space to rumble with regimented clout. The detailed Spanish guitar intro of Daddy Yankee’s Toy Hermoso is textured through the mids and feels as if the guitarist is by my left ear, but as the reggaeton beat comes in, it’s a toe-tapping and head-nodding mix that has me dancing at my desk like I’m in a Cuban salsa club – especially with head-tracked spatial audio on.
Cueing up Rema’s FUN, the intentionally warm and static-filled intro is faithfully relayed, and as the dynamics and speed of the track build, I’m once again dancing in my seat.
For neutrality and detail (that ‘integrated hi-fi versus fun’ debate), it’s worth pointing out that you’ll get a little more from both the Technics EAH-AZ100 and the Bowers & Wilkins Pi8 – think the breathy delivery of Taylor Swift’s vocal in Elizabeth Taylor, which feels just slightly more human and detailed in the rival buds. But if you prioritise immersive, vigorous impact, I find the AirPods Pro 3 even better than the also-excellent Bose QuietComfort Ultra Earbuds (2nd Gen) – and that’s not a statement I make lightly.
Apple AirPods Pro 3 review: Design
- Vastly improved fit
- Loss of the case button is a misstep
- Could do with a dedicated app now
As mentioned (and pictured below), the AirPods Pro earpiece shape has been reworked this time around. The angle of the neck has been tweaked quite significantly and I’m a huge fan. Simply put, they fit well – and by that I mean securely, even when I shake my head – for me now, and that has never been the case with any AirPods until this iteration.
An IP57 rating means the buds are also dust resistant and waterproof to a depth of one meter for up to 30 minutes, which is noteworthy.
The case is a touch taller and wider but less deep now. The LED light is now undetectable when it’s not on, which makes for a sleek look. Also sleeker but for me less helpful is the loss of the reset button on the back of the case. I say this because when upgrading my iPhone to a model that supports Apple Intelligence to test these earbuds, I found myself needing to reset the AirPods. And that’s no longer as easy as it once was, because double-tapping the front of the case with the lid flipped, but not touching the front of the case (so that said case registers my tap attempts) isn’t a simple maneuver.
My one minor gripe here concerns the supporting software – because software design is still a ‘design’ issue, for me.
Yes, you can pull down on the Control Center on your iPhone to see the basic AirPods bubble, at which point you can check your listening mode, conversation awareness status and spatial audio profile. Then, you can go into your AirPods Pro tab, in Settings, to check the current state of more general features such as the Hearing Health tab, call controls, head gestures, enabling charging case sounds, automatic ear detection to pause your music when you remove one, and so on.
But given that so many of AirPods Pro 3’s newer features require extra taps and navigation to alternate apps (there’s the Translate app for your language modules, the Health app to see your heart-rate data, the Fitness app to see that heart-rate increase as you exercise) I wonder whether at this point it might make sense to have one dedicated AirPods Pro 3 app to rule them all. I’m speculating, but I’d definitely like to try that, because the current solution will doubtless have you consulting Apple’s support pages in an effort to find how – or more importantly, where – to toggle on what you need…
Apple AirPods Pro 3 review: value
- The best ANC earbuds on the market for iPhone owners
- Not the most original choice… but the best
Popular taste doesn’t always mean good taste, does it? And I say that as a fan of pop music. Value is also an odd thing to quantify, since whether or not these represent value for you will hone in on possibly three things. Firstly, do you want the best ANC for your iPhone? Because here, AirPods Pro 3 are doubtless the best noise-cancelling earbuds on the market – Apple said they’re twice as good as AirPods Pro 2, and I can vouch for that claim.
Secondly, do you value the extra battery life offered here over the Pro 2 – even though it’s far from the the best on the wider market. For reference, the Technics EAH-AZ100 (which we called “good rather than great for battery”) can offer up to 12 hours from the buds on a single charge with no ANC deployed, while AirPods Pro 3 can only manage a maximum of 10 hours before needing to be charged.
And thirdly, how much do you want your earbuds to take your heart-rate and use that reading within workouts (yes, even vocally, thanks to Apple Intelligence’s virtual buddies)?
It’s worth noting that I think AirPods Pro 3 are also the best earbuds for small ears Apple has made, because of the newer fit – and I found myself loving the Live Translation feature at home (although it’s not exclusive to the Pro 3), since my other half speaks Spanish.
So, I’ll leave all of that with you. For me personally though (and putting my minor queries with the case and software support to one side) there’s great value here.
Should I buy the Apple AirPods Pro 3?
|
Attributes |
Notes |
Rating |
|---|---|---|
|
Features |
Heart-rate monitoring and Live Translation add to an extensive suite of perks for newer iPhone owners |
5/5 |
|
Sound quality |
Zealous, powerful and immersive audio backed by excellent ANC |
4.5/5 |
|
Design |
The tweaked shape and repositioned neck on the driver housing is a huge hit |
4.5/5 |
|
Value |
Simply the best iPhone earbuds for ANC on the market – if not the longest-lasting |
4.5/5 |
Buy them if…
Don’t buy them if…
Apple AirPods Pro 3 review: Also consider
| Header Cell – Column 0 |
Apple AirPods Pro 3 |
Bose QuietComfort Ultra Earbuds (2nd Gen) |
Technics EAH-AZ100 |
Cambridge Audio Melomania A100 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
Drivers |
‘Custom high-excursion’ Apple driver with new multiport acoustic architecture |
10mm |
10mm free-edge dynamic |
10mm Neodymium dynamic |
|
Active noise cancellation |
Yes |
Yes |
Yes |
Yes |
|
Battery life |
8 hours (buds, ANC on; 10 hours with ANC off); 6.5 hours (buds, heart rate sensor on); 24 hours (case) |
6 hours (earbuds, ANC off; 4 hours with it on) case not specified |
12 hours (earbuds, ANC off); 17 hours (charging case) |
11 hours per charge; up to 39 hours with the case |
|
Weight |
5.6g per bud |
7.7g per bud |
5.9g per bud |
4.7g per earbud |
|
Connectivity |
Bluetooth 5.3 |
Bluetooth 5.3 with aptX Lossless / Adaptive |
Bluetooth 5.3 with LDAC and LC3 compatibility |
5.4 with LDAC and aptX Lossless |
|
Waterproofing |
IP57 case and earbuds |
IPX4 earbuds only |
IPX4 earbuds only |
IPX5 earbuds only |
How I tested the Apple AirPods Pro 3
- Tested for three weeks
- Tested walking along Seaham beach, on a packed Eurostar train and at home
I used AirPods Pro 3 for three weeks while compiling this review, and my testing involved listening to podcasts and music, as well as watching streamed movies from various devices and streaming platforms – including Android and Apple sources.
I listened at home, during several sea-glass hunting walks in County Durham and on a busy train to Paris – and let me tell you, with these as both a musical companion and live translation tool, they eased my journey no end.
I’ve been testing audio products full-time since 2019, firstly over at our sister publication What Hi-Fi? as a staff writer (locked in our hi-fi testing facility for two years, I was), then as senior writer at TechRadar – and, since early 2024, audio editor.
My background as a professional dancer meant I was very interested in what AirPods Pro 3 made of my heart-rate and overall fitness (still got it, friends) and my seemingly insatiable need to move to music is what drives me to search for faithful timing, precision, clarity and good old fashioned fun in recorded audio.
- First reviewed October 2025.
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becky.scarrott@futurenet.com (Becky Scarrott)




