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Review: Jabra Enhance Select 300

These hearing aids are relatively pricey, but their performance, battery life, and technical support make them worth the added cost.
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Grey rectangular case on wooden surface holding silver hearing aids with a one hand pulling a hearing aid out
Photograph: Jabra Enhance

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Rating:

9/10

WIRED
Best sound on any OTC hearing aid I’ve tested to date, regardless of environment. Very lightweight. Epic battery life. Amazing, helpful support.
TIRED
Very expensive compared to the field. Occasional app disconnects. Bluetooth audio streaming quality is middling at best.

I’ve been covering hearing aids for WIRED for nearly three years now, and I regularly talk to users and prospects about them when I wear them in public. Regardless of what I’m testing, one brand name has consistently and repeatedly popped up during that time: Jabra.

The Danish brand has a long history making a variety of audio gear, but I’ve always associated it mostly with the Bluetooth headset craze of the aughts. The brand made an early entrance into the over-the-counter hearing aid market (via an acquisition), and it hasn’t let up since, releasing new OTC models at a steady clip.

The latest of these is the Jabra Enhance Select 300, the brand’s smallest and most advanced model yet. You wouldn’t really know it just from the look of the aids. These are fairly standard behind-the-ear models that, while quite small (2.64 grams each), don’t offer any obvious surprises. The demure gray chassis sits close to the back of the ear and snakes a silver cable to the ear canal. Each aid carries a single button on its reverse.

Photograph: Jabra Enhance

Jabra front-loads a lot of the purchase process to ensure your aids arrive preconfigured. You can take an online hearing test or, as I did, upload a professional audiogram; either option allows Jabra’s audiologists to tune the product appropriately before it is shipped. The company also asks you to take a lengthy medical questionnaire to rule out any hearing-related medical problems before sending out the product. Eventually, the digital chatter can get a little tiresome: During the shopping process, Jabra even asks about your credit rating and suggests a monthly payment plan for its lowest-priced product if you say your credit is trash. Once you do place an order, Jabra barrages you with introductory emails and invites you to schedule an orientation with an audiologist to walk you through the hardware and the app. Admittedly, some of this is helpful—especially the Zoom orientation—but Jabra could stand to pump the brakes on the auto-mailer a bit.

There’s plenty to explore once your hearing aids arrive. For example, if you aren’t sure which type of ear tips are best for you, you’ll have ample room to experiment, because the company sends seven different baggies of them to try out, including open, closed, and tulip-style tips in a multitude of sizes. I counted 70 different tips in total, and I have no doubt that Jabra would happily send more if I asked.

With tips installed (I usually test with open tips), I found that getting the aids situated on my ears was made a bit easier thanks to a pinging sound that plays—Jabra calls it Smart Start—while you are guiding the receivers into your ear canal. Controls are as basic as they come: the button on the right aid turns the volume up for both aids, the one on the left turns volume down, and either one cycles through the programs—four in total—if you hold it down for a couple of seconds.

Naturally you’ll get a lot more out of the hearing aids if you connect your set to a mobile app, and Jabra actually has two apps to choose from. The Enhance Pro app comes up first in the app store, but the Enhance Select app is newer. They work about the same way, but since the Enhance Select is more recent I’ll write mostly about it. Primarily you’ll use the app to move among the four modes—All Around, Restaurant, Music, and Outdoor—all of which are self-explanatory. Each mode has extra options associated with it; for most you can select between “noise filter” to mute ambient sounds or “speech clarity” to boost conversational volume. These can be further customized thanks to three equalizer sliders corresponding to bass, middle, and treble frequencies. Volume can be set globally or individually per ear in the app as well. Of special note: Any customizations you make to programs aside from the All Around mode are reset to defaults once the hearing aids are put back into the charging case.

Photograph: Jabra Enhance

Speaking of the case, it’s not a particularly small one, but it carries roughly 72 hours of charge. Considering the aids themselves can run for a monstrous 24 to 30 hours on a single charge (a claim backed up by my testing), it’s likely you’ll be able to get through the work week without ever having to plug the case in to top up its battery. (A USB cable and A/C adapter are included.)

Anyway, I’ve spent too long talking about features and specs and have buried the lede far too deeply. While all of the above stuff is great, the best thing about the Enhance 300 is that the audio sounds fantastic. I have long since become accustomed to ubiquitous hiss and static during hearing aid testing, and I was shocked that—without any adjustments—these units had virtually none. I had to crank the volume all the way up beyond a comfortable range to experience even a little bit of hiss, and even that was barely noticeable. I found all the listening modes to be usable, but I didn’t feel the need to switch out of the All Around mode much, as it functioned well in most situations.

Overall, I found the impact of the 300 to be more subtle than expected—in a good way—providing a gentle but noticeable boost to the sounds I wanted to hear, while filtering out the noise. And of course, when I needed more volume, it was there for me. Hearing aids can often provide a jarring, blunt, and booming experience, but Jabra’s simply felt much more natural.

Downsides? As with most aids, I found that Jabra’s ear tips would start to itch after a few hours of wear, eventually prompting me to remove them to take a break. This is something to which most wearers eventually acclimate, but I don’t wear hearing aids frequently enough to be quite there yet. I also found the aids could sometimes lose their connection to the app after removing them from my ears and setting them down on a table; I would usually need to place them in the case for a minute to reset the connection. And while the hearing aids can be used to stream audio via Bluetooth, this was a thin, lackluster experience—as is common with most brands.

Jabra is more than available to help with these and any other issues, fortunately. Adjustments may be requested on demand via the app or the website, and follow-up video chat sessions with an audiologist are available too. When I said I thought my hearing aid wires were too short, the company promptly sent longer replacements right away, free of charge.

But that level of service doesn’t exactly come cheap. At $1,995, the Jabra 300 is by far the most expensive OTC hearing aids of the ones I’ve tested, and twice the price of the Sony CRE-C10, which is otherwise my favorite model to date. You can trim $200 off the price tag if you opt for a one-year warranty instead of three and forgo audiologist support, but even then the price is still in the stratosphere—and you lose one of its biggest selling points. While the Jabra set is cheaper than prescription hearing aids, it’s not by much. That said, the quality really does make it all worth it. Good thing you know your credit score, right?