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Beats Fit Pro Review: All-Day Comfort Wireless Earbuds Tested

By haunh··5 min read·
4.3
Beats Fit Pro (1st Gen) - True Wireless Noise Cancelling Earbuds - Active Noise Cancelling - Sweat Resistant Earphones, Compatible with Apple & Android, Class 1 Bluetooth®- Beats Black

Beats Fit Pro (1st Gen) - True Wireless Noise Cancelling Earbuds - Active Noise Cancelling - Sweat Resistant Earphones, Compatible with Apple & Android, Class 1 Bluetooth®- Beats Black

Beats

  • Flexible, secure-fit wingtips for all-day comfort and stability
  • Custom acoustic platform delivers powerful, balanced sound
  • Spatial Audio with dynamic head tracking for immersive music, movies, and games
  • Three distinct listening modes: Active Noise Cancelling, and Transparency Mode, and Adaptive EQ

Quick Verdict

Pros

  • Flexible wingtip design keeps earbuds locked in during movement and exercise
  • Active Noise Cancelling plus Transparency Mode give you control over ambient sound
  • Spatial Audio with head tracking creates a theater-like listening experience
  • IPX4 sweat and water resistance handles workouts and rainy walks
  • Up to 24 hours total battery with the charging case
  • H1 chip enables seamless switching between Apple devices

Cons

  • Wingtips may feel tight for users with smaller ear canals during extended sessions
  • No wireless charging — USB-C only
  • Transparency Mode sounds slightly artificial compared to the best in class
  • USB-C power adapter not included in the box

Quick Verdict

The Beats Fit Pro earn their place as a daily carry. They sound better than most competitors at this price, the wingtip fit stays secure through real movement, and the 24-hour battery loop covers everything from your morning commute to an evening Netflix binge. If you want proper noise cancelling without the AirPods Pro price tag, the Beats Fit Pro are worth considering. I'd give them a 4.3 out of 5.

What Is the Beats Fit Pro?

Picture this: it's 6:47 AM, I'm on my third attempt to find earbuds that won't fall out when I tilt my head to tie my shoes. That's the reality that pushed me to try the Beats Fit Pro. These are true wireless earbuds with Active Noise Cancelling, a flexible wingtip design, and Apple's H1 chip — all wrapped in a matte black shell that actually looks like a product someone designed with intention.

Beats Fit Pro (1st Gen) - True Wireless Noise Cancelling Earbuds - Active Noise Cancelling - Sweat Resistant Earphones, Compatible with Apple & Android, Class 1 Bluetooth®- Beats Black

Released in late 2021 as a step below the premium AirPods Pro, the Fit Pro carved out its own identity. They aren't trying to be invisible like the AirPods. Instead, they're the earbud for someone who moves — gym sessions, dog walks, the sprint to catch a bus. The package includes the earbuds themselves, a compact USB-C charging case, three ear tip sizes, and a short charging cable. Note: no power adapter, which is becoming annoyingly standard.

Key Features

  • Flexible wingtips — single-piece silicone wings that flex into your ear's outer ridge, not just sit in the canal
  • Custom acoustic platform — 12-layer driver system tuned for balanced low-end without muddy mids
  • Spatial Audio — dynamic head tracking places sound in a fixed space around your head
  • Three listening modes — ANC, Transparency, and Adaptive EQ that adjusts on the fly
  • Apple H1 chip — one-tap pairing, automatic device switching, hands-free "Hey Siri"
  • IPX4 sweat resistance — survives workouts and light rain without issues
  • 6-hour earbud battery — 24 hours total with the charging case
  • Class 1 Bluetooth — extended range and fewer dropouts versus standard Bluetooth

Hands-On Review

I unboxed these on a Tuesday — not a rainy Sunday, just a regular Tuesday when the previous earbuds died mid-podcast. Setup took under two minutes: flip open the case near my iPhone, tap once on the pairing prompt, done. The Android experience was nearly identical, though I had to manually go into Bluetooth settings instead of getting a pop-up.

What surprised me was the wingtip situation. I'm the type who ignores wingtips because they usually feel like a design afterthought. The Fit Pro wingtips are different — they genuinely flex and lock. I wore them to a hot yoga class (yes, I was that person), and they didn't budge. No readjusting between poses, no pressure headache by the end. That was unexpected. By day five, I'd forgotten they were in. That's the real test — when you stop thinking about your earbuds and start just enjoying the audio.

Sound quality is where Beats has quietly matured. The bass still hits — it's a Beats product, let's not pretend otherwise — but it's not the cartoonish thump of older models. The low end has texture now. I listened to the new Kendrick on these and caught bass details I'd missed on my previous earbuds. Mids are clear, highs don't sibilate unless the recording is already bright. Spatial Audio works best with movies and games where the head tracking adds a layer of realism that's genuinely cool, if a little gimmicky for music.

Noise cancelling is effective for daily life. Coffee shop chatter? Nearly gone. The rumble of a subway car? Gone. A colleague talking directly to me in my home office? Still audible, which is exactly what Transparency Mode is for. I switched to Transparency on my walk home from the train station — I could hear traffic and footsteps while the podcast continued. The transition between modes is instant, one long press on either earbud.

Battery life held up to Beats' claims. I got 5 hours 40 minutes with ANC on during a mix of music and calls. The case charged them fully twice before needing a top-up itself. USB-C charging, not wireless — if you need wireless charging, look at the AirPods Pro or the Sony WF-1000XM5.

Who Should Buy It?

  • Active users — If your earbuds need to survive workouts, commutes, and movement without readjustment, the wingtip design solves the most common complaint about true wireless designs.
  • Apple ecosystem households — The H1 chip makes device switching seamless when you own an iPhone, iPad, and Mac. Audio Sharing lets you send audio to a second pair of Beats or AirPods instantly.
  • Podcast and audiobook listeners — Six-plus hours of continuous listening means fewer mid-chapter recharging interruptions. The comfortable fit doesn't fatigue your ears during long sessions.
  • Android users who want premium sound — You lose some Apple-specific features, but the core experience — sound quality, ANC, fit — is identical. The Beats app covers customization needs.

Skip the Beats Fit Pro if you need wireless charging, or if you found the original Powerbeats Pro too bulky. Those wanting the absolute smallest possible earbud should look at the Galaxy Buds2 Pro. And if you exclusively use older non-Bluetooth devices, these won't work without an adapter.

Alternatives Worth Considering

Apple AirPods Pro (2nd Gen) — If you live deeply in the Apple ecosystem and want the absolute best noise cancelling in this form factor, the AirPods Pro justify the premium. They also add wireless charging and a speaker in the case for Find My alerts. The Fit Pro sound slightly better on bass, though.

Sony WF-1000XM5 — Sony's flagship earbuds have the best noise cancelling in the true wireless category, period. They cost more and have a bulkier case, but if ANC is your top priority, the XM5 win. Sound profile leans brighter than the Beats.

Beats Studio Buds+ — A step below the Fit Pro in fit security (no wingtips), but smaller, cheaper, and available in a transparent colorway that's genuinely fun. Better for casual listening than active use.

FAQ

Yes. The flexible wingtips distribute pressure evenly, and I wore them for three hours straight during a cross-country flight without the discomfort I'd get from cheaper earbuds. The 6-hour battery per charge covers most daily routines.

Final Verdict

The Beats Fit Pro are exactly what they promise to be: comfortable, great-sounding wireless earbuds that stay in your ears when you move. The wingtip design is the real differentiator — it works, and it works better than I expected going in. Noise cancelling handles everyday environments competently, and the 24-hour battery loop means you won't be hunting for a charger mid-day. They're not the absolute best at any single thing, but they're very good at almost everything. For the price, that's a win. Will I keep using them? Honestly, yes — unless something breaks, these are staying in my daily carry.