Bose QC Headphones Dip to $199 in Weekend Sale
By Riley Hart
Image / Photo by Spacejoy on Unsplash
Bose QuietComfort headphones are down to $199 this weekend—the best price you’ll see all year.
The deal centers on Bose’s QC Headphones, currently listed on Amazon in multiple colors for $199, a $150 cut that makes this the most compelling price point for the model in 2024. The Verge notes that this iteration is essentially a refresh of the last-gen QC45, packing the familiar Bose comfort and pedigree you expect, plus a few software tricks that let you dial in noise-canceling levels and bake in custom listening modes. In real-world use, the headline features still shine: up to 24 hours of battery life, plush comfort for long listening sessions, and reliable multipoint Bluetooth that makes it easy to hop between a phone and a laptop without re-pairing.
But this is not Bose’s most advanced wireless headset at the moment. The Verge’s hands-on notes flag two key caveats: the standard QC Headphones lack the deeper “immersive audio” mode you’ll find in the newer QC Ultras, and they do not deliver the higher-quality Bluetooth or lossless USB-C audio that the Ultra model supports. In other words, you’re paying for a refined, comfortable, long-battery ANC experience, not the bleeding edge of Bose’s wireless tech.
For bargain-minded buyers, the price drop matters in a crowded field. The weekend sale puts Bose squarely in reach for travelers and remote workers who want a calm audio rendezvous without breaking the bank. Setup time is simply a matter of pairing the cans with devices and toggling a few preferences in the Bose or device app; there’s no heavy software onboarding, which adds to their “set-and-forget” appeal. The 24-hour battery life means you can leave the charger at home on longer trips, and the comfortable pads help you power through long sessions without fatigue.
Two practitioner-style insights matter for buyers navigating this deal. First, value in this segment often hinges on marginal gains you’re willing to trade off. If you crave the most advanced Bluetooth codecs and lossless USB-C audio, you’ll outgrow the QC Headphones quickly. The QC Ultras offer those higher-end capabilities, so the $199 price tag on the standard model is a classic case of “great value if you don’t need every bells-and-whistles feature.” Second, the sale highlights a steady reality for mid-range ANC: software tricks can improve daily use (custom listening modes, adjustable noise cancellation), but hardware limits remain. Buyers who want a simple, reliable, long-haul listening option should see this as a slam dunk; those chasing sonic perfection or future-proof USB-C lossless may want to wait for a deeper price on a newer model or consider alternatives.
In the end, this weekend drop is a compelling entry point into Bose’s ANC ecosystem without overspending. It’s not the absolute latest Bose headset, but it’s a strong value for most users who want solid comfort, dependable noise cancellation, and easy multi-device pairing at a discount.
Verdict: Buy—if you want solid Bose ANC with long battery life at the best price of the year and you’re okay with tradeoffs on the very latest feature set. If you must have immersive audio modes or USB-C lossless, consider waiting or looking at the Ultras.
Sources
Newsletter
The Robotics Briefing
Weekly intelligence on automation, regulation, and investment trends - crafted for operators, researchers, and policy leaders.
No spam. Unsubscribe anytime. Read our privacy policy for details.