Sony WF-XB700 review

Sporty budget buds that are reliable across the board Tested at £89 / $60 / AU$159

Sony WF-XB700 review
(Image: © Sony)

What Hi-Fi? Verdict

Sony’s cheapest true wireless earbuds are reliable options for sporty types

Pros

  • +

    Clear, punchy sound

  • +

    Decent battery life

  • +

    Comfortable, lightweight build

Cons

  • -

    Rivals offer more detail

  • -

    Reasonably large earbud design

Why you can trust What Hi-Fi? Our expert team reviews products in dedicated test rooms, to help you make the best choice for your budget. Find out more about how we test.

Sony is prolific in the headphones market, keen to embrace as many categories and budgets as possible. Needless to say, it is dominant across many of them, too, as a peek at our What Hi-Fi? Award-winners shows.

Sony is behind the best-value premium true wireless earbuds around, the multi-Award-winning Sony WF-1000XM3. So, given its reputation and ubiquity in the world of headphones, anyone looking for a pair of more affordable, and sport-friendly, true wireless buds may well be tempted by the Sony WF-XB700.

Build

Sony WF-XB700 build

(Image credit: Sony)

Though the WF-XB700 are the cheapest model in Sony’s true wireless stable, they aren’t simply a watered-down version of the WF-1000XM3.

The WF-XB700 are part of the company’s Extra Bass range of audio products and are tuned to emphasise low-frequency response, rather than deliver a neutral sonic balance. Their design is also aimed at fitness fanatics who value sweat-resistance and an ergonomic fit.

Sony WF-XB700 tech specs

Sony WF-XB700

(Image credit: Sony)

Battery life 9 hours (+9 hours from the case)

Water resistance IPX4 

Eartips x4

Bluetooth version 5.0

Weight 8g (each)

The XB700 don’t have the WF-1000XM3’s noise-cancelling functionality or Sony’s top-of-the-line processing chip – not that you'd expect that at this price. Considering what they do offer for their outlay, focusing on what the XB700’s don’t have seems rather unfair.

Battery life is a reasonable 18 hours – nine hours from the buds, nine hours from the case – with a 10-minute quick charge providing up to one hour of playback. That’s similar to budget sporty true wireless rivals, such as the Bose SoundSport Free – even if it doesn’t match the remarkable 30-hour figure offered by the class-leading JBL Reflect Flow.

Bluetooth 5.0 is onboard to provide reliable connectivity between your source and the earbuds, and a longer range between the earbuds and source than you probably need (240m). Their IPX4 water resistance rating provides the buds (but not the case) with protection against ‘water splashing’, so if your ears perspire during workouts or you’re caught in a rain shower, the XB700 have you covered.

Comfort

Sony WF-XB700 comfort

(Image credit: Sony)

To help ensure the buds stay in your ears, the XB700 have oval-shaped contours that sit between the silicone ear tips (of which there are four sizes to choose from) and outer housings. At just under 3cm deep from eartip to housing edge, they are rather on the large side, but they look more burdensome than they feel. It helps that the buds are lightweight, at 8g each, too.

It takes a few twists to get them securely into place, but once they're in you can almost forget about them, safe in the knowledge that it would take some knocking, or a rather rigorous button press, to dislodge them.

Speaking of buttons, the XB700 have an easy-to-locate one on the underside of each earbuds to control music playback, rather than a more runner-friendly touch sensor. The left earbud’s button can be pressed to increase volume and held to decrease it, while the right button is pressed once to play/pause tracks and answer/end calls, twice to skip forward and three times to skip backwards a track. In our test, we don’t encounter any issues with operation during exercise.

Sound

Sony WF-XB700 sound

(Image credit: Sony)

With the XB700 being part of Sony’s Extra Bass family, we have an idea as to what to expect from their sonic balance. Sure enough, they embrace the beat underpinning Ben Pearce’s re-edit of Maribou State’s Midas.

There’s meat behind their low-end, and that southern frequency substance is complemented by decent punch and pleasing tautness and agility. While bass-heavy performances can often overshadow mid and high frequencies, that isn’t the case here. The electronica, piano melody and vocal riding above the bassline come through with presence, clarity and detail – even if the synths in the mix are a little rounded off.

Their tonal balance plays into the hands of the thickset bassline in Billie Eilish’s bad guy, but doesn’t neglect the rest of the mix: Eilish’s layered, sometimes Tremolo-affected vocal and the percussive snaps are all prominent above it in the Sony’s soundstage.

There is more insight from the similarly sporty JBL Reflect Flow and the non-sporty Cambridge Audio Melomania 1. While pg.lost’s Suffering sounds weighty and energised, the Sony’s rivals inject more space into the dense instrumentation and fill it with levels of subtlety that are overlooked by the XB700. During a sparser recording, such as Eilish and Khalid’s lovely, these shortcomings are more evident. Even so, we find the Sonys have the directness to keep us entertained (and moving).

Verdict

The WF-XB700 aren’t among the best propositions in Sony’s extensive headphones range. Those who don’t need these earbuds’ sportier features will be better served by one of its rivals, such as the aforementioned Cambridge Audios.

But they still prove up to the task of entertaining fitness fiends, courtesy of their clear, punchy sonics and lightweight, comfortable build. And that’s certainly enough for them to make it onto our rather limited shortlist of budget sport true wireless earbuds.

SCORES

  • Sound 4
  • Features 4
  • Build 4

MORE:

Read our guide to the best in-ear sports headphones

Read our Cambridge Audio Melomania 1 review

Read our JBL Reflect Flow review

Read our Bose SoundSport Free review

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