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  • About the Sony WH-1000XM4

  • What We Like

  • What We Don't Like

  • Should You Buy It?

  • About the Sony WH-1000XM4
  • What We Like
  • What We Don't Like
  • Should You Buy It?

Pros

  • Excellent audio quality

  • Top-notch noise cancelling

  • All day comfort

Cons

  • Effective operation has a learning curve

When I first encountered the WH-1000XM3 back in 2019, I didn't have any preconceived notions about their greatness, but I walked away imminently impressed. Here were headphones that somehow managed to impact me emotionally via their rendering of songs I've enjoyed for 20 years, while delivering class-leading app functionality and features so robust and complex they felt as much like an addition to my smartphone as they did my ears. The fact that they did all this in a form factor sleek and lightweight enough to forget I was wearing them at times put the 1000XM3 on an entirely new plane.

So when the new XM4 showed up from Sony, I felt a mix of excitement and consternation. Could they live up to their predecessors?

To be sure, Sony has not reinvented the wheel with the WH-1000XM4 (the fourth version of this mighty model), but the company managed to keep everything that was great about the previous version while adding feature flourishes and software shuffles that make them highly worthy of their price tag. If you want the most polished consumer headphone options on the market in 2020, you owe it to your ears to check these out.

About the Sony WH-1000XM4

New for summer of 2020, Sony's WH-1000XM4 now occupy the tippy-top spot in the company's rather vast lineup of consumer headphones. For their asking price of just shy of $350, you're getting wireless over-ear headphones with incredible sound, advanced features, and some of the best noise-canceling tech in the business.

Here are the specs at a glance:

  • Cost: $349.99 MSRP
  • Colors: Black, Silver
  • Style: Over-ear
  • Noise-canceling: Adaptive Noise Canceling (with dual sensors) via QN1 chip
  • Battery life: ~30 hours
  • Audio/BT codecs: DSEE HX/DSEE Extreme, LDAC, AAC
  • Frequency response: 4Hz - 40kHz
  • Passive operation: Yes (3.5mm cable included)

Essentially, Sony has taken the already flexible XM3 model and made it even more so with this year's XM4. There are a handful of new or improved features and functionality that combine to make for a seamless wireless experience over Bluetooth, and cancel oodles of noise no matter what you're doing.

Credit: Reviewed / Lee Neikirk

In the box, you'll get the headphones, USB-C charging cable, 3.5mm cable, and an airplane adapter—all of which fit snugly in the sturdy carrying case.

After complaining last year that the (at the time) pricy XM3 didn't include a 3.5mm audio cable, there's one in the box this year (I'm not taking credit for the inclusion, but you never know). Here's everything you're getting for your $350:

  • The WH-1000XM4 headphones
  • A hardshell carrying case
  • A (still very short) USB-C charging cable
  • A 3.5mm analog connection cable
  • An airplane adapter

This is just about everything most people need. Am I being greedy for hoping that a 3.5-to-1/4" adapter is included with the XM5? Maybe—but some of us musicians would like to plug these into a digital audio interface, Sony!

What We Like

Can I just wear them forever?

It's been around a year since I reviewed the WH-1000XM3 model that debuted in 2019, and I still look back on them fondly from time to time, especially when testing heavier, less comfortable headphones. With little change in design, the XM4 are just as comfortable and plush, if not even more so. I've been using these every day (just about) for the last couple of weeks, and I really just never want to take them off.

One major reason these are so pleasurable to slip over your ears is the efficacy of the noise-canceling—but more on that shortly. Even without music playing or noise-canceling engaged, the WH-1000XM4 are a dream for my ears. They're light and compact for over-ear headphones, barely registering gravitational downward pressure or clamp force, yet gripping tightly enough that I can wobble my head around like a muppet and they stay put.

Credit: Reviewed / Lee Neikirk

This is me, being very happy to have these light, very comfortable cans hugging my head.

Like the previous model, the band and ear cups are well-padded, but the padding is not so heavy-duty as to incur excessive heat buildup (and I'd know—Philadelphia is steaming hot right now). The cups swivel and pivot enough to adjust to a variety of temple/jaw shapes, and though my glasses are not the thickest spectacles you could wear, they're thick enough that they sometimes don't get along with highly clampy over-ears. No problems here.

The XM4 also fold up into a compact, ball-like shape for stowing in their case or taking up minimal surface space. I'm doing my best to think of a complaint when it comes to wear—something for the more sensitive crowd to mull over—but am just drawing a blank right now. I've been using them in both wireless and wired mode for the last 8 days or so, and really have no complaints at all from a comfort standpoint, even after hours of use.

Controls are still flawless

If you read a lot of my reviews (I'm flattered), you're probably aware that I've a bit of a penchant for tactile, on-set buttons. One major design trait of the XM4 (like the XM3 before them) is that they don't have many buttons at all. You've got buttons for power and multi-function (which you can program in the app) for toggling between noise-canceling and ambient sound. Otherwise, the controls are entirely tap-and-swipe.

All of that action happens on the rear of the right ear cup, and there's a bit of a learning curve if you want to use these headphones in a smooth, seamless kind of way. Double-tapping the center of the cup plays/pauses music (holding will activate voice assistants). A full upward swipe raises volume, while a full downward swipe lowers it. Likewise, you can skip forward/backward through tracks on an album (or playlist, if you aren't stuck in the 1970s like me) via forward/backward swipes. Just like last year, it all works without issue.

Credit: Reviewed / Lee Neikirk

You'd never know it from looking, but all of your music/call playback controls can be easily utilized using touch-capacitive gestures on the right ear cup.

One of my favorite control metrics is the ability to quickly check your surroundings by placing your fingers over the cup: music gracefully fades down, allowing you to easily have a conversation or listen to what's going on around you, while the music continues playing in the background. It's a great way to have a brief conversation or listen to a loudspeaker announcement at the airport without full-on stopping whatever music or podcast you're listening to. When you lift your fingers away, the audio climbs back to full volume.

However, Sony has a new feature this year that adds to that functionality in an intelligent way. It's called "Speak-to-Chat," and can be toggled in the Sony Headphones Connect app. At first, I was dubious about how well this would work. Cue me shouting "Hello?" and the music failing to stop. However, after I paused what was playing (which was admittedly really loud), the headphones seemed to learn to hear/recognize my voice.

Whenever I speak, a chime plays and sound pauses automatically.

Now, whenever I speak, a chime plays and sound pauses automatically. It's one of the best ways I've seen to get around that awkward situation where you're fumbling with your phone, trying to pause music because someone has started talking to you despite the obvious headphones on your head. If the headphones don't hear you talk for a few seconds, music automatically resumes. It's simple, but also kind of awesome.

Speak-to-Chat is all-in-all an excellent addition to the headphones. After using it more, I became accustomed to how readily it would recognize my voice and pause whatever was playing. Regarding the auto-resume feature, if you're having a somewhat one-sided conversation (i.e. listening to a long announcement or a long discourse from a friend or family member), the headphones will sometimes begin playing again before you'd like. While this is a hilarious Pavlovian training method to encourage individuals to interject an "mmhm" or "I see" on occasion, it is also a small drawback of this feature.

That said, if you don't like it, you can just turn it off—no dealbreakers here.

Naturally, the audio quality is still top notch

While most of what's new with the XM4 can be found in its software or more highly-tuned external microphones, you wouldn't want to buy headphones with poor audio quality, even if they had the best noise-canceling in the business (which, ahem, these do).

Fortunately, the XM4 sound as awesome as expected. I've spent many hours listening to a bunch of my favorite stuff—'70s prog rock, dream pop, classical music, lo-fi beats, and so on—and all of it sounds great. Admittedly, I'm probably more prone to fiddling with the app's suite of EQ options than the average person. I very much enjoy the distinct presets that Sony has designed for various equalization aims: "Relaxed" for low-key stuff, "Bright" for more exciting music, and so on.

Credit: Reviewed / Lee Neikirk

Sony included a 3.5mm cable this year. The XM4 sound great whether you use them wired or wireless.

It's easy to find an "ideal" setting for all kinds of music, but you don't necessarily need to tweak the EQ to enjoy what you're hearing an awful lot. The flat, non-EQ'd frequency response is not "flat" from a studio mixing perspective—there's pretty decent emphasis on bass and midrange. However, nothing's ever muddy or masked. I tend to listen to albums that were not mixed to today's perfecting and computerized standards (we're talking tape reel transplants on some of these), so if headphones don't give the frequency range proper due, it's usually very audible as you end up with too much mellotron. And if there's one thing nobody wants, it's too much mellotron.

The XM4 seem particularly well-tuned to avoid excessive sibilance.

While we haven't confirmed this in the lab yet, I can say from my time listening that the XM4 seem particularly well-tuned to avoid excessive sibilance—the uncomfortable hiss that can sometimes plague treble frequencies. Even on the very treble-forward "Bright" EQ at almost maximum volume, cymbals don't make me wince or recoil. Bass hums warmly in the background against overdriven guitars and warbling drawbar organ, everything cohesive and preserved in the aural space. In short: I really, really love listening to these.

Great Bluetooth and app functionality

One of my favorite things about Sony's top-tier headphones is how well implemented their Bluetooth functionality is. The connection made between the Sony Headphones Connect app and the headphones seems nigh unbreakable. I can leave my smartphone on one end of my apartment and go all the way to the other side (probably close to 40 feet) without so much as a single stutter in music playback. I wish that was the case with most Bluetooth headphones, but plenty of them still struggle with such range.

One new feature that folks may find really useful—especially in the Zoom/work-from-home era—is the ability to connect to two devices at the same time over Bluetooth. If you have two devices you want to use in succession, you can pair with both of them, and accessing their audio is as simple as playing audio on one or the other. The LDAC codec is disabled during this feature, meaning you won't be able to stream high-resolution audio from two devices, but it works just fine for something like Spotify.

Credit: Reviewed / Lee Neikirk

One of the new features for the XM4 is the ability to pair with two devices at once. I paired with both my Samsung Galaxy S8 phone and Samsung tablet without issue.

Like almost everything about these headphones, implementing simultaneous pairing is done in the Sony Headphones Connect app. The app is your gateway to such a range of features and functions that using these headphones without it would be akin to only listening to one side at a time.

There's a learning curve here, and some of the XM4's features may make novice users balk. Around the Reviewed office, we often joke good-naturedly about Sony's penchant for software complexity, especially when it comes to the company's TVs (where multiple picture modes are available across multiple "scenes") and game consoles (I can't wait to see how HDR/8K optimization is handled on the PS5). The XM4 fall into that camp.

Credit: Reviewed / Lee Neikirk

These headphones have so many techy features, you're majorly missing out if you don't make use of the app.

Upon opening up the app, you'll be prompted to connect the cans. On the Status tab, you can check your battery life, the status of Adaptive Sound Control (a noise-canceling function that adjusts to what it guesses you are doing—mine says "Writing too much"), which device(s) you're currently connected to, what music or podcast is currently playing (with OTT track selection and pause functionality for exterior apps), and the current volume level.

On the Sound tab, you can toggle Ambient Sound Control settings (on/off, amount of canceled noise), Speak-to-Chat, and run settings for the Noise Canceling Optimizer, which you can optimize for your ears whenever you like, as well as measuring atmospheric pressure—particularly good for flights. This is also where you'll find the Equalizer settings, which allow you to select from flat (no EQ), a number of your own custom settings, and Sony's distinct presets.

Credit: Reviewed / Lee Neikirk

Even after many hours of listening, battery life was still at 90%.

This is also where you'll find another touted feature (which also works with Sony's WH-1000XM3)—360 Reality Audio. This is a swirling, immersive sound experience similar to Dolby Atmos. It's more "fun" than "selling point," but it's a welcome inclusion nonetheless.

To fully integrate it, you'll need additional apps, not to mention the downright silliest thing these headphones offer: take and upload photos of your own ears. The apps/music services that support it—deezer, Tidal, and nugs.net at present—may not be the most familiar for casual listeners, but you'll have to get acquainted if you want to take advantage of it.

And there's more, too. Like I said, there's a learning curve. You could probably spend hours tweaking different functions, trying out whether you like them, optimizing the way you use the XM4 depending on whether you're at home, commuting on a noisey bus, or flying somewhere (someday). While such advanced features and noise-canceling functions might not seem as necessary in this time of pandemic lockdown, they'll be eventually, and the noise-canceling is just as handy for working from home.

May I interest anyone in an anechoic chamber?

Finally, let's talk about the noise canceling—one of the chief reasons to purchase these headphones. Sony is one of, if not the most successful implementer of noise canceling in headphones, alongside Bose.

To really convey the efficacy of the noise cancellation, let me set the scene. My apartment in stuffy southwest Philly has been a symphony of whirring fans and window unit ACs for weeks. It gets very warm and muggy here, so there's nary a moment of true silence to be found. For days and hours, we've accepted the fact that at any given moment, one or both window units would be whirring at full blast; my upstairs neighbors would be putting on another home rendition of Stomp; and my landlord would be hammering away at a pipe (or something?) in the basement below us. We are surrounded and beset by noise.

When I first put these on, even with no music playing and before any optimization, the level of anxiety-reduction was palpable—I could feel it somatically. After a moment of enjoying it, I handed them to my fiancee to try out. After putting the XM4 on her ears, she exclaimed, "Wow, I feel like I'm in a vacuum." It's easy to just accept the incessant noise when you can't really do anything about it, but it makes truly useful noise-canceling really land.

Style is subdued, and yet there's no denying these headphones have a premium aesthetic.

I work remotely, and my laptop is mere feet from an old, loud window AC. Just now, I took the time to re-optimize the XM4's noise cancellation, and I literally can't hear the droning mechanical wind sounds at all right now. Sure, I'm playing music loud because that's how I roll, but the fact that such ubiquitous noise is so cleanly quashed is nonetheless impressive. I feel fairly confident in saying that Sony continues to deliver some of the best (if not the best) noise canceling around.

Listenin' for days

There's not a ton to say with regard to the XM4 battery life: It's excellent, and stands up alongside the best wireless headphones you can buy. Even with all of the software bells and whistles and excellent noise canceling you're getting from these cans, the battery life holds out at a good 30+ hours—even more if you don't spend as much time messing with different EQ settings and software settings as I do.

Of course, if you do happen to run out of battery, there's always passive mode: plugging the powered-down XM4 into a device using the included 3.5mm cable. One issue we've run into in the past when switching from wireless/Bluetooth mode to passive mode is that the headphones lose a lot of their sound character—presenting a flatter or less robust soundscape during wired use, making it feel like a major concession to be wielded when battery life is depleted.

However, one of the coolest claims to fame for the XM4 is that they still sound awesome when wired in for listening, without any of the next-level tech and features the app makes available. In fact, I've taken to using them as wired laptop-side cans for the last few days, and I only occasionally remember that I'm not quite getting their full functionality during this use case.

What We Don't Like

If it ain't broke, don't upgrade

Other than the obvious price paywall that these live behind—$350 is a lot of money for headphones for most people—there aren't really any drawbacks here. But it is very relevant that our previous favorite-of-all-time headphones, the Sony WH-1000XM3, can regularly be found for at least $100 less.

If you just want the baseline comfort, sound quality, and noise canceling, you're probably safe buying the XM3.

Why is that relevant? Because for most intents and purposes, they're the same product. The XM3 is sleek, lightweight, comfortable; it sounds great, cancels ample noise, and has all kinds of software/app functions, just like the XM4. The newer product is better, sure, and does a number of things the XM3 doesn't (Speak-to-Chat, DSEE Extreme, simultaneous device pairing), but if you just want the baseline comfort, sound quality, and noise canceling, you're probably safe buying the XM3.

Should You Buy It?

If you can afford it—yes, absolutely

This is a very easy question to answer: if you're serious about your headphones, these are very likely 2020's best. The biggest barrier for entry here is simply the price. With the previous model, the WH-1000XM3, regularly available for around $100 less, it's basically Sony competing with itself.

Obviously, these headphones are magnificent in basically every area. They're comfortable for long periods, cancel noise like nobody's biz, sound amazing, and have more features than you can shake a stick at. If I didn't already own like six pairs of headphones, I'd probably just buy them right now—heck, I might anyway.

We're not sure if there's enough new functionality to justify an immediate upgrade from the XM3 model.

However, I'm not certain yet that I'd buy them if I already owned the XM3. The new stuff is certainly great, but I'm not sure there's enough new functionality to justify a full-price upgrade from the XM3 to the XM4. If only headphone manufacturers had trade-in offers a la smartphones.

However, if you don't own the XM3 already and have the money, I doubt there will be a better set of wireless over-ear headphones to hit the market in 2020.

Meet the tester

Lee Neikirk

Lee Neikirk

Former Editor, Home Theater

@Koanshark

Lee was Reviewed's point person for most television and home theater products from 2012 until early 2022. Lee received Level II certification in TV calibration from the Imaging Science Foundation in 2013. As Editor of the Home Theater vertical, Lee oversaw reviews of TVs, monitors, soundbars, and Bluetooth speakers. He also reviewed headphones, and has a background in music performance.

See all of Lee Neikirk's reviews

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