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TUESDAY, APRIL 21, 2026
Consumer Tech3 min read

Nothing CMF Headphone Pro Drops to $69, Adds Cushions

By Riley Hart

Nothing’s modular CMF Headphone Pro are down to their lowest price to date

Image / theverge.com

Nothing’s budget-friendly CMF Headphone Pro just hit an all-time low of $69.

The CMF Headphone Pro is Nothing’s answer to “affordable, feature-packed wireless.” The company’s budget-focused CMF line has built a reputation for delivering attractive gadgets with features you usually see on gear twice the price. Now the Headphone Pro — the brand’s first over-ear wireless pair — is on sale at Amazon for $69, down from $99, in light gray and a muted green. An extra perk: you can kick the look up a notch with $25 interchangeable cushions, available in orange or green.

Design-wise, the Pro leans into comfort and simplicity. The reviewer notes the headphones eschew Nothing’s infamous retro transparency in favor of round earcups, plush padding, and a soft headband. The big hardware difference you’ll notice versus many premium cans: physical buttons. There are dedicated playback controls, volume adjustments, and a customizable action button, plus a multi-function roller — exactly what some listeners crave after years of twitchy touch surfaces. And for listeners who want on-the-fly tone shaping without hunting for an app, Nothing includes an Energy Slider to balance treble and bass in real time.

Sound and ANC on a sub-$100 device are where the tradeoffs begin. The Verge emphasizes that this is a budget option in a market crowded with mid-range and premium noise-canceling cans, so don’t expect the same nuance or isolation as flagship models. But for a purchaser who wants usable ANC, decent comfort, and a few practical on-device controls without signing in to an app, the Headphone Pro presents a compelling value proposition at its current price.

From a market perspective, CMF’s strategy — price-sensitive designs with features that feel premium — is worth watching. Nothing’s budget sub-brand has repeatedly shown that you don’t need to price-gouge to feel premium; you can slot a feature set in the mid-$100s and still attract everyday users who want a little more than a basic Bluetooth listen. The Headphone Pro’s $69 sale makes that argument harder to ignore for shoppers who don’t want to compromise on convenient controls or a comfortable fit.

Practitioner insights for buyers navigating this deal:

  • Price-to-value calculus matters. At $69, you’re getting a quiet bargain versus many entry-level ANC cans that hover in the $80–$100 range and still lack on-device controls a lot of listeners actually use. The optional cushions add $25 per set, bringing a one-cushion/configuration up to about $94 total; plan accordingly if you want color customization without overspending.
  • Setup and ongoing use. The headphones are designed to be plug-and-play; setup time should be minutes, with no mandatory account or app sign-in required to listen or adjust basic playback. If you like tweaking EQ, you’ll do most of it with the Energy Slider on-device rather than diving into an app.
  • Build vs. budget reality. Expect a plastic-heavy chassis typical of budget cans. Comfort is strong thanks to the rounded earcups and soft padding, but don’t expect premium heft or long-haul durability of higher-end models. The ability to swap cushions helps extend the life and customize the feel, but you’ll pay extra for that DIY comfort.
  • What to watch next. If Nothing updates the CMF line with larger battery life, deeper ANC, or more robust app integration, it could elevate the Sub-$100 category even further. For now, the Headphone Pro is a strong option in a crowded space, especially for those who value physical controls and immediate usability.
  • Verdict: Buy if you’re budget-conscious and want a genuinely usable ANC headphone with physical controls and a comfortable fit, all at a price that’s hard to beat. Wait if you’re chasing top-tier noise cancellation, premium materials, or a plug-and-play app-driven sound profile to dial in every nuance. In other words, at $69, it’s a clever steal; at full price, you’ll want to compare more options before committing.

    Sources

  • Nothing’s modular CMF Headphone Pro are down to their lowest price to date

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