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    Home » Marshall Earbuds Deep Review: Are They Worth the Hype in 2026?
    EarBuds

    Marshall Earbuds Deep Review: Are They Worth the Hype in 2026?

    MudasirBy MudasirJune 14, 202610 Mins Read
    marshall earbuds

    I’ve been using Marshall earbuds for the past several weeks, swapping between the Motif II ANC and the Minor IV during my daily commute, at my desk, on runs, and on a couple of longer train journeys. I also own the Sony WF-1000XM5 and have spent time with the Bose QuietComfort Ultra Earbuds, so I’m not coming at this without a reference point.

    The short version: Marshall earbuds are good, but good in a very specific way. If that way matches how you listen, you’ll love them. If it doesn’t, you’ll spend time fighting the default sound. This review is here to help you figure out which side of that line you’re on.

    If you want the full picture of where Marshall sits against every major brand, our complete wireless headphone buying guide has that comparison covered.

    Table of Contents

    Toggle
    • The Lineup
    • Design and Build Quality
    • Comfort
    • How They Sound
    • The ANC Test
    • Battery Life
    • The Marshall App
    • How They Compare to What Else Is Out There
    • Final Words
    • Frequently Asked Questions
        • Are Marshall earbuds good for working out?
        • Do Marshall earbuds work properly on Android?
        • How do I pair Marshall earbuds to my phone?
        • Is the Marshall app actually worth using?
        • Which Marshall earbuds are best for rock music?

    The Lineup

    Before anything else, let me clarify what Marshall currently sells in the earbud category, because the naming can trip people up.

    ModelTypeANCEarbud BatteryTotal BatteryMSRPStreet Price 2026
    Motif II ANCIn-ear stemYes, with Transparency6 hrs (ANC on) / 9 hrs (off)30 hrs (ANC) / 43 hrs (no ANC)$199$140 to $160
    Minor IVOpen-fit budNoApprox. 8 hrs30+ hrs$129.99Approx. $99
    Motif I ANCIn-ear stemYes (older gen)4.5 hrs (ANC on)20 hrs totalDiscontinuedClearance
    Minor IIIOpen-fit budNo5 hrs25 hrsDiscontinuedClearance
    ModeWired in-earNoN/AN/A$29.99$25 to $30

    The Motif I and Minor III are both discontinued. If you find them heavily discounted, the Minor IV is still the smarter buy at current prices. The wired Mode is worth mentioning for anyone who wants zero battery anxiety and the Marshall look at under $30.

    For this review I focused on the Motif II ANC and Minor IV, since those are what you’ll actually find at retail in 2026.

    Design and Build Quality

    marshall earbuds design and build quality

    The first thing I noticed pulling the Motif II ANC out of the box was the case. It’s heavier than the AirPods Pro case, with a magnetic snap lid and a textured rubber finish that doesn’t collect fingerprints. The earbuds have brass-tipped stems, a detail borrowed directly from Marshall amplifier knobs. It’s a small thing that makes the whole product feel considered rather than assembled.

    The Minor IV has a lighter case with a more compact form factor. Both cases charge via USB-C and support wireless Qi charging. I’ve started dropping the Motif II case on my desk pad overnight rather than hunting for a cable, which I didn’t expect to appreciate as much as I do.

    Put them next to a Sony WF-1000XM5 or AirPods Pro 3, and the Marshalls are the ones that get comments. At a coffee shop, three separate people asked what brand they were. That matters to some buyers more than others, but it’s worth saying.

    Comfort

    marshall earbuds comfort

    Comfort is where I’ve seen the biggest split in opinion, so I want to be specific.

    The Motif II ANC uses a traditional in-ear stem with three ear tip sizes in the box. Getting the right size matters a lot with these. Medium tips worked for me and created a solid seal without pressure. I wore them for a three-hour work session without discomfort. At hour four, some canal fatigue started, which is normal for this style.

    The Minor IV is a completely different experience. The open-fit design sits in the outer ear rather than pressing into the canal. No seal pressure, noticeably lighter. I wore the Minor IV for a four-hour afternoon walk and forgot I had them in. The tradeoff is that without a seal, outside noise comes in freely and you lose some low-end presence.

    If you’re sensitive to in-ear tips or plan long listening sessions, the Minor IV will suit you better. If you want isolation and stronger bass, the Motif II is worth the adjustment period.

    How They Sound

    marshall sound quality

    Marshall has been building amplifiers since 1962. Hendrix, Clapton, and Led Zeppelin all built their live sound through Marshall gear. That history shows up in how these earbuds are actually tuned, not just in the branding.

    Both the Motif II ANC and Minor IV are voiced with elevated mids and controlled low-end. Treble is present but rolled off slightly so it never gets harsh on distorted guitar or crashing cymbals. Once you hear it, you understand why Marshall calls it their “signature sound.”

    Here’s what I found genre by genre:

    Rock and Blues: This is where the Marshalls genuinely deliver. I played through Zeppelin, John Mayer, and Arctic Monkeys. Guitar riffs have real weight and texture. Drum hits feel physical. Vocals sit naturally in the center rather than getting buried.

    Jazz and Acoustic: Surprisingly strong, especially on the Minor IV. The open-fit design creates a wider soundstage and instrument separation feels natural.

    Podcasts and Spoken Word: The mid-forward tuning works well here. Voices are clear and warm, and I had no listening fatigue over long sessions.

    Hip-Hop and EDM: This is where you’ll need the app. The sub-bass depth that Beats or Sony deliver by default isn’t there out of the box. I spent a few minutes in the Marshall app bumping the low-end EQ and got it to a workable place, but it’s an extra step that Sony listeners won’t have to take.

    The ANC Test

    marshall earbuds ANC test

    I want to be direct here because this is where I see the most misleading reviews.

    The Motif II ANC handles office environments well. Sitting at a desk with HVAC running, keyboard noise from nearby coworkers, and general background chatter: all of that gets pushed back noticeably. I could focus on music without raising the volume to compensate.

    On the subway, it’s a different story. The low-frequency rumble gets reduced, but mid-frequency train sounds and station noise come through more than I expected. Compared to the Sony WF-1000XM5, the Marshall feels like roughly 70% of the noise suppression on a loud train. For office use, the gap barely matters. For a loud underground commute, you’ll notice it.

    Wind noise reduction is better on the Motif II ANC than the first-generation model. I tested them on a windy morning walk and the improvement is real. Transparency mode is good too. It lets in outside sound without the tinny processing that some earbuds add.

    IPX5 on the earbuds and IPX4 on the case means sweat and rain aren’t concerns. I wore them in light rain twice without any issues.

    Battery Life

    marshall battery life
    ModeRated TimeWhat I Got
    Motif II ANC on6 hours5 hrs 45 min
    Motif II ANC off9 hours8 hrs 50 min
    Total with case (ANC on)30 hoursRoughly accurate
    Minor IV8 hours7 hrs 40 min
    Quick charge (15 min)+1 hourConfirmed accurate

    The 15-minute quick charge is more useful than I expected. I tested it twice: once deliberately, once when I grabbed the earbuds off my desk having forgotten to charge them. Both times I got just over an hour of listening from the top-up.

    Both models support multipoint Bluetooth, so I stayed paired to my laptop and my phone simultaneously. Switching when a call came in worked without any manual re-pairing.

    One spec worth flagging: both the Motif II ANC and Minor IV run Bluetooth 5.3 with LC3 codec support alongside SBC and AAC. LC3 is the codec used by Bluetooth LE Audio, and while most devices don’t fully activate it yet, the hardware is ready. Older competing models like the JBL Tour Pro 2 or Technics AZ100 missed this window before LE Audio became a standard consideration.

    The Marshall App

    marshall earbuds app

    The Marshall Bluetooth app is available on iOS and Android with identical feature access on both. That matters because Apple AirPods give Android users a stripped-down experience. Marshall doesn’t do that.

    What I actually used:

    The EQ presets are where I spent the most time. I landed on Studio for most listening after a few days of experimenting. It brings the sound closer to neutral without losing the warmth that makes Marshall’s tuning worthwhile. For hip-hop I pushed the low-end manually beyond what the Bass preset offered.

    The battery health mode caps charging at 90% to reduce long-term lithium cell stress. Most audio brands at this price point don’t offer this. It’s a genuine sign Marshall is thinking about the product past the initial sale.

    The ANC intensity slider gives you a range from zero to full rather than just on/off. I ran it around 70% in the office and was full on the commute.

    One more thing worth knowing: the Minor IV is made from 90% recycled plastic, sourced from old CDs, washing machines, and electric bikes. The Motif II uses recycled materials in its case as well. Neither Sony nor Bose matches this at the same price range.

    How They Compare to What Else Is Out There

    marshall earbuds comparison
    FeatureMarshall Motif II ANCSony WF-1000XM5Bose QC Ultra EarbudsApple AirPods Pro 3
    2026 Street PriceApprox. $150Approx. $279Approx. $249Approx. $249
    ANC PerformanceGood for officesBest-in-classExcellentExcellent
    Codec SupportAAC, SBC, LC3LDAC, AAC, SBCAAC, SBCAAC (Apple only)
    Sound ProfileMid-forward, warmNeutral, balancedWarm, detailedCrisp, balanced
    Battery with ANC6 hours8 hours6 hours6 hours
    Water ResistanceIPX5 buds / IPX4 caseIPX4IPX4IP54
    Wireless ChargingYesYesYesYes
    Android ExperienceFull featuresFull featuresFull featuresLimited
    DesignRetro amp-inspiredMinimalPremium ovalStem, minimal

    At $150 street price, the Motif II ANC sits $100 below Sony and Bose. The ANC gap is real, but so is the price gap. For Android users who listen to rock and value design that stands out, the value case holds. If ANC depth in loud environments is the top priority, the Bose QuietComfort Ultra Earbuds are the stronger technical choice.

    Final Words

    After several weeks of daily use, here’s where I landed.

    The Motif II ANC is the more complete product. The ANC works, the sound is genuinely distinctive, the battery matches the spec sheet closely, and at $140 to $160 in 2026 it’s priced at a point where the value case holds up against the Sony and Bose competition. Not because it beats them technically, but because it doesn’t need to at that price difference.

    The Minor IV at $99 is the easier recommendation. No ANC, but better comfort for long sessions, bigger drivers, longer battery, and the full Marshall sound at a price that doesn’t require much justification.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Are Marshall earbuds good for working out?

    I wore the Motif II ANC on several runs. The IPX5 rating handled sweat without issue. The stem stayed in place at a moderate pace but shifted slightly during faster intervals. For steady-pace running and gym use, they’re fine. For high-intensity training with a lot of head movement, the fit isn’t as locked-in as something like the Jabra Active series.

    Do Marshall earbuds work properly on Android?

    Yes, fully. The Marshall app gives identical access to EQ, ANC control, battery health mode, and firmware updates on both iOS and Android. That’s a better deal than AirPods, where most features disappear outside the Apple ecosystem.

    How do I pair Marshall earbuds to my phone?

    Open the case near your phone with Bluetooth on. The earbuds enter pairing mode automatically and appear in your device list. First pairing takes about ten seconds. Every connection after that is automatic when you open the case.

    Is the Marshall app actually worth using?

    Yes. Without it, both earbuds sound good and work normally. With it, you get meaningful EQ control, ANC intensity adjustment, the 90% battery health cap, and firmware updates. Download it before your first listening session and spend ten minutes with the EQ settings.

    Which Marshall earbuds are best for rock music?

    The Motif II ANC for most rock listeners. The in-ear seal adds passive isolation that lets the mid-range tuning work properly without ambient noise competing. Guitar texture and drum dynamics come through in ways the open-fit Minor IV can’t match in noisy environments. In a quiet room, the Minor IV’s larger 12mm drivers produce a wider soundstage that suits classic rock and acoustic particularly well.
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    Mudasir
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    I'm Mudasir, founder of Deep Review Lab. I have spent years testing consumer electronics and smart home devices before writing a single word about them. Every product on this site goes through real daily use, not a quick unboxing. I started this site because I got tired of reading reviews that were clearly written by people who never touched the product. My goal is simple: give you the honest take a knowledgeable friend would give before you spend your money.

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