🎧 Elevate your workout soundtrack — because your ears deserve the best.
The Jabra Elite Active 75t earbuds combine a secure, sweatproof fit with IP57 water resistance, delivering up to 24 hours of battery life and cutting-edge active noise cancellation. Equipped with four microphones for superior call clarity and personalized sound tuning via the Jabra Sound+ app, these wireless earbuds are engineered for professionals who demand performance and style during sports and daily life.
Control Method | Voice |
Controller Type | Touch Control |
Control Type | Voice Control |
Unit Count | 1.0 Count |
Wireless Technology | Bluetooth |
Connectivity Technology | Wireless, USB |
Headphone Jack | Wireless |
Noise Control | Active Noise Cancellation |
Headphone Folding Features | In Ear |
Earpiece Shape | Rounded tip |
Headphones Ear Placement | In Ear |
Style Name | Active 75t |
Theme | Video Game |
Color | Navy |
Battery Average Life | 24 Hours |
Battery Charge Time | 24 Hours |
Water Resistance Level | Water Resistant |
Is Electric | Yes |
Number of Power Levels | 1 |
Antenna Location | Exercising |
Compatible Devices | Universal |
Cable Features | Without Cable |
Additional Features | Wireless |
Enclosure Material | Plastic |
Specific Uses For Product | Sports and Exercise |
S**C
2+1 multipoint works (phone + laptop/phone)
I bought this specifically for multipoint and hoped to achieve 3 devices or 2+1 ... and I got 2+1 workingCurrently, my personal android stays connected and my work iphone is also connected ... and I can receive calls on either arbitrarily (zero settings changes or fiddling on either phone), and play music or audio from either, arbitrarily, but not simultaneously (thankfully). This is standard for Bluetooth multipoint and is exactly how my other multipoint single-earpiece worked.But ... I also can now switch off bluetooth completely on the iphone and hit the connect button in the laptop's win10 bluetooth settings and immediately use the Jabra 75t for Zoom/WebEx calls ... But I have to hit DISCONNECT on the laptop and then go to the iphone bluetooth settings to successfully reconnect on the iphone (or probably move out of range).So with a willful disconnect/reconnect, I can toggle between android/iphone and android/laptop ... and I'm certain you could do so in any other 1-stays & other-2-toggle pattern. (I read that it can support up to 8 total devices but only 2 active at a time, so it's technically 2+6 multipoint vs my current config of 2+1 ... but good luck if you want more than 2 laptops ... ipads and tablets should be fine though)Oddities: the first try failed ... I connected android, iphone, *then* laptop ... win10 connected as an "other device" and not a headset / audio device ... and refused to change ... I reset the 75t and connected to the laptop *first* and it connected as an audio device ("Connected voice, music") , then the android, then disconnected (but not deleted or forgot) on the laptop then connected the iphone and got the working setup I have now.Oddity 2: the laptop initially connected output to the 75t but had the input coming from the internal microphone ... no idea why ... I changed it to the 75t ... now with each disconnection and reconnection, it remembers that the 75t is *preferred* and auto-switched the microphone properly.Good things:* to my utterly untrained ears, music sounds great in these* to my ear shape that keeps having other earpieces fall out, the 75t ACTIVE really stays in well ... I tried to shake / bounce to dislodge them and they stayed putEDIT: I was wrong, after 20+ min they wouldn't stay in ... Tried other sizes of ear tips, DEEPLY frustrated, finally bought foam replacements from COMPLY.... works fantastically now ... Jabra should ship with those instead of these silicon ones* I love that there's physical buttons ... electrosensitive buttons kept hanging up on my calls on my multiple other earpieces I've tried (trying to be cheap in replacing my plantronics m180 multipoint one-sided)* my most common caller says I sound FAR better than ANY previous headset* there is a tuning system for how you hear the audio spectrum per ear ... I'm not sure it is terribly effective since it was not multiple volume levels per pitch, just a yes/no, some of which I found to be very very very quiet to me and maybe should have answered no to* the case is VERY light* I'm biased in favor of green and I love the pale green color* the earbuds are very easy to remove from the case despite being strongly magnetized in* hear-through mode is capable of boosting volume above ambient levelsIssues :* the R and L imprint on the R and L earbuds is very nearly impossible to see, despite being on the towards-the-ear side (they could have easily made it visible) ... they are different shapes but not obviously so and if they aren't coming out of the case, it's slightly messy.* the Jabra Sound+ app comes with the ability to play white-noise / pink noise / waterfall etc ... the 75t's right-ear-play-button cannot stop/pause this at all ... that's just broken logic. Similarly, the 75t's right-side-triple-click option is empty and there's nothing unique to assign to that (all options are assigned already) ... this is absurd, they have a programmability assignment option and don't allow you to turn on/off the waterfall/noise ability THEY provided with right-triple.* the pitch tester should have had multiple volume levels per pitch to usefully test hearing ... or multiple answer-buttons, like "just barely heard" not just a touch-single-confirmation* single-sided is right only ... the left side cannot be single-sided ... this is silly* I wish Jabra would offer an optional MUCH larger case that is itself a 10,000 mAh phone charger AND earpiece holder-charger-caseWill update if battery life is odd but it seems great as of now
L**E
Fantastic for music; ok for phone calls; Better than Airpod Pros
I am a bit persnickety about audio and sound quality. I have tried hundreds of different earbuds and headphones, wired and wireless, with and without noise canceling, and with and without bluetooth. I notice and appreciate audio nuances, soundstaging, imaging, dynamic range, and the like. I am not quite an audiophile, but I like to think that's just because I'm not quite persnickety enough to be a snob.These have become my default earbuds for listening to music or audio books. The sound quality is the best of the bluetooth noise canceling earbuds I have tried: Sony, Bose, Beats, Airpod pros, and a couple of offbeat brands.Deep bass, crisp treble, perfectly clear midrange. They are easy to use, have seamless connectivity, come with a decent smartphone interface, and provide great fit and comfort.Noise cancelation works well, albeit not perfectly. Nothing fully cancels exterior sound; it is always a matter of degree. That said, the degree of noise cancelling on these earbuds is outstanding. They rival the Bose headsets, but without the bulk. There is a greenbelt park near my house that abuts a highway. Without earbuds/headphones, you can hear the highway pretty prominently. With these earbuds and the ANC activated, it's as if I am in an isolated forest far from the highway."Hear-through" mode works well, too, if you want to be able to hear your surroundings for safety.They have fallen out of my ears a few times, but generally stay seated in the "ear pocket" fairly well. IMHO, Jabra has always designs products that fit my ear canal pretty well. Your weirdly-shaped ears might produce different results. ;-)Battery life has never been an issue. I have gone on long hikes, bike rides, and plane rides with them, and they have never run out of juice. The charging case does, indeed, work well to recharge the earbuds when not in use so they are always charged and ready to go when I need them. Using the case habitually also helps prevent me from misplacing the earbuds, which was always my biggest fear when considering wireless bluetooth earbuds.IMHO, the airpod pros do not get loud enough to be worth the premium price. I understand the purpose of volume limits, avoiding liability and lawsuits, and the like. But the volume cap on the airpod pros is just too soft. I want to be the one who determines if it is too loud, not the manufacturer. The noise cancelation on the airpod pros was good, but not as good as the Jabras.The one con is that using the earbuds as a wireless headset for phone calls or zoom conferences is not the best, mostly because they do not have a boom-mic. It is sometimes difficult for the other party to hear me, especially if I am driving (road noise). They do work fine as a bluetooth headset in a quiet room, though. But they are designed for listening, not as a wireless headset. I have a separate bluetooth earbud specifically designed for phone calls. These earbuds can double as a headset if a call comes in; but they are not designed to be a wireless headset for phone calls.If you need earbuds that double as phone headsets (and you don't mind the volume limit on the airpods), then the airpod pros might be your best option. But these are the best of the mainstream premium audio earbuds on the market.UPDATE: Over a year later, and I still love these earbuds. I keep them in their case, so they always recharge easily, and the case does help prevent me from misplacing them (one of my big concerns about wireless earbuds ever since I first read about AirPods). I use them on flights, dog walks, hikes, bike rides, coffee shops, kid's basketball practices, and elsewhere. They have never run out of charge before I stopped listening to music. Sound quality remains top notch.
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