Two things can be true at once. Yes, Samsungâs Galaxy Buds 3 Pro have the most derivative design yet of any of the companyâs earbuds. Apart from gimmicky LED strips, thereâs nothing particularly original or eye-catching about their stemmed look. But the $249.99 Buds 3 Pro also happen to be the best-sounding, most polished earbuds that Samsung has produced. Their audio quality ranks with some of my favorite wireless earbuds like Sennheiserâs Momentum True Wireless 4 and the Technics AZ80. And the Buds 3 Pro include genuinely useful voice commands that donât require saying a wake phrase beforehand.Â
Technology
Samsung Galaxy Buds 3 Pro review: light ’em up
Samsung’s Galaxy Buds 3 Pro have an AirPods-like stem design, but they make up for that lack of originality with stellar sound, great voice call quality, and more.
Thatâs a sterling start, but their potential is held back by clumsy design decisions, a lack of multipoint connectivity, and active noise cancellation thatâs merely adequate at this $250 price. Over the summer, Samsung also had to pause shipments of these earbuds to address quality control issues after early buyers managed to easily rip the silicone ear tips. I never experienced that problem with my review pair, and the Buds 3 Pro are now widely available again.
Samsungâs latest earbuds donât come in any fun colors like the bora purple Buds 2 Pro. Your options are white â where the AirPods resemblance gets a little uncanny â or gunmetal gray. Samsung has tried to create some visual distance between these earbuds and the AirPods by going with a more angular stem and putting a seethrough lid on the charging case. And then there are those white LEDs, which you can light up by squeezing both stems when the buds are out of your ears.Â
Youâll never see this touch of flair when wearing them, of course, but other people will. The lights can be set either to glow steadily or do a pulsing effect, but what the LEDs canât do is show helpful things like the remaining battery level for each earbud. That seems like the most obvious purpose for these and yet⦠nope! The lights do turn on when youâre trying to locate the Buds 3 Pro with Samsungâs Find My feature, at least.Â
The move to a stemmed design might feel like Samsung lazily joining the pack, but what matters more is that it results in a more secure, stable in-ear fit. Iâve found the Buds 3 Pro to be very comfortable, and they havenât fatigued my ears even when I keep them in for most of a day at the office. Voice call performance is also quite impressive; you can sample the mic quality of the Buds 3 Pro (and other recent earbuds) in a Vergecast episode from earlier this month.
Speaking of voice, the most convenient feature of the Buds 3 Pro is their voice controls. At any time, you can say simple commands like âvolume upâ or ânext songâ and the earbuds will execute those requests through your phone â without requiring some annoying wake phrase first. It just works, and you donât have to speak particularly loudly for the buds to detect voice commands. They only cover the fundamentals, but Iâm now using them daily. If you prefer physical controls, Samsung has basically lifted the AirPods Pro control scheme, with pinch gestures for play / pause, skipping tracks, or toggling between ANC and transparency modes. You can also slide your finger along the stem to adjust volume. The angular shape means the gestures arenât quite as foolproof as on the AirPods, but Iâve gotten them down fairly well.
The Buds 3 Pro offer terrific sound quality, with a tuning that closely follows the Harman target curve, which most people find pleasing. That means youâll hear emphasis on bass and treble, but the mids still come through without sounding recessed. Samsungâs flagship earbuds sound full and detailed, bringing out the best in the latest albums from Waxahatchee, Post Malone, and Billy Strings. There is 360-degree / spatial audio with head tracking for those of you who A) own a Galaxy phone and B) enjoy that sort of thing. I continue to (mostly) ignore it.
Iâm usually not someone who gets hung up on Bluetooth codecs, but I swear my ears can tell a difference when listening to the Buds 3 Pro with a Galaxy S24 Ultra, which can tap into Samsungâs Seamless Codec Ultra High Quality (SSD UHQ) for richer audio â especially if youâre playing lossless tracks. Thereâs just an extra layer of detail and fidelity thatâs less pronounced when using these buds with a non-Samsung device. But even with my Pixel 9 Pro XL, they sound great. The Buds 3 Pro are a punchy, crisp listen that deliver across all genres.Â
The active noise cancellation, however, has disappointed me at times. Itâs just not quite as robust or as powerful as the AirPods Pro, Pixel Buds Pro 2, or Bose earbuds. Can it cut back on some of the everyday life clamor? Sure, but I was hoping for Samsung to have a better showing in this category. The Buds 3 Pro do have a fantastically clear transparency mode, so I have zero complaints there. You can also enable an âadaptiveâ mode that, like with Appleâs earbuds, will dynamically blend ANC and transparency based on your surroundings so that important sounds (like sirens) can quickly get your attention.Â
The Buds 3 Pro donât support true multipoint, so you canât connect them to two devices at once. Just like Apple, Samsung is pushing its own ecosystem with an âauto-switchâ feature between its various Galaxy laptops, tablets, and phones. But Iâve noticed that even if your other devices are outside Samsungâs walled garden, enabling auto-switch makes it much quicker to hop between them without having to disconnect from the current source every time. Some earbuds are very stubborn about holding onto a connection with the last-paired device until you manually disconnect, but with these, you can just select them in the Bluetooth settings of the device you want to use, and theyâll switch over without any fuss.
Iâve had no complaints about battery life over several weeks of usage, and you can stretch it further by disabling some features like the aforementioned voice controls. The earbuds are rated IP57 dust and water resistant, though the charging case lacks any such protections. Thatâs unfortunate when competitors are increasingly making their cases more durable.
Samsungâs Galaxy Buds 3 Pro might not have a unique design identity anymore, but with improved comfort and voice call performance, theyâre an example of function dictating form. I can take or leave the gimmicky lights, and the angular shape seems like Samsungâs taking pains to avoid these being labeled as AirPods clones. They are, but you could make a case that they sound better than Appleâs buds. And theyâre dependable performers by nearly every metric except for noise cancellation. Thatâs where the inevitable Buds 4 Pro have room to improve â hopefully while bringing back some character (or color). For anyone with a Samsung phone, these are the de facto choice, and theyâre a great one. But other Android owners should also give the Buds 3 Pro a long look for their sound fidelity and mic clarity. Unless multipoint is a must-have, thereâs not much to find fault with.
Photography by Chris Welch / The Verge