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How Much Are Wireless Headsets? | Full Price Range Breakdown

Wireless headsets cost anywhere from $29.56 for basic PC models to $799 for premium audiophile headphones, with most good office and gaming models landing between $80 and $350.

A wireless headset is one of those purchases where the price range can feel overwhelming — you can spend thirty bucks or eight hundred, and both boxes say “wireless headset” on them. The difference comes down to what you actually need it for. Office calls need different hardware than competitive gaming, and music listening has its own price tier. Here is the real breakdown by use case, with current prices for the models that actually deliver.

Before jumping specific models, one distinction saves most people from buying the wrong thing: headsets (with a microphone, built for calls and gaming chat) are not the same as headphones (music listening only, no mic). Business headsets optimize for voice clarity and all-day comfort. Gaming models prioritize spatial audio and low latency. Music headphones focus on soundstage and noise cancellation. Matching the type to your activity is the first way to make sure the price you pay delivers what you expect.

Business & UC Headsets: What Office and Remote Workers Pay

Unified Communications (UC) headsets designed for work run from about $188 to $345, and they come with features office users actually need: dedicated Microsoft Teams buttons, physical mute toggles, and DECT or Bluetooth connections that handle eight-hour shifts without dying. These are the wireless headsets most remote workers and call-center staff should be looking at.

Model Price Type & Features
Jabra Evolve2 55 UC Mono (Bulk) $188.16 PC & Mobile, Teams Version
Poly Voyager Legend 50 $218.00 Bluetooth, PC & Mobile, Teams
Jabra Evolve2 55 UC Mono $218.00 PC & Mobile, Teams Version
Jabra Evolve2 55 Stereo $226.00 PC & Mobile, Teams Version
Poly Savi 7310 UC $274.26 PC Wireless DECT, Teams Version
Jabra Evolve2 65 UC Stereo $286.00 PC & Mobile, Teams Version
Poly Savi 8220 UC $291.48 PC Wireless, Teams Version
Poly CS540 $300.70 Desk Phone Wireless
Poly Savi 7220 $300.09 Desk Phone Wireless
Jabra Engage 65 SE Convertible $336.00 Desk Phone + PC Wireless
Jabra Engage 65 SE Stereo $343.00 Desk Phone + PC Wireless
Jabra Evolve2 65 UC Stereo with Stand $345.00 PC & Mobile, Teams, Charging Stand
Poly Voyager Free 60+ Wireless Earbuds $266.56 PC + Mobile & Teams Version

One thing to watch with office headsets: models labeled “Teams Version” come with firmware pre-configured for Microsoft Teams, meaning the big round button on the earpiece launches Teams and answers calls with one tap. A standard Bluetooth headset will work for calls, but you lose that integration. If you spend all day in meetings, the Teams version is worth the small premium.

DECT headsets like the Poly Savi 7310 need a dedicated base station — they don’t pair with a phone’s Bluetooth directly. They do offer better range and stability in busy office environments, but they stay tethered to their desk base.

Gaming Headsets: What Gamers Pay in 2026

Wireless gaming headsets run from about $33 to $600, but most players find the sweet spot between $80 and $150 for solid battery life, low-latency 2.4 GHz connections, and comfortable pads for long sessions. The higher you go, the more you get in audio detail and build materials — not always in features you actually hear.

If you are on a tight budget and need something functional, a solid cheap wireless headset can get you started without sacrificing basic audio quality. For most buyers, the mid-range delivers the best value.

Model Price Best For
Untouched Gaming Headset (UDH) $33.79 Budget, PS5/PS4/PC/Switch
Logitech G321 Lightspeed $50 Entry wireless, ~50h battery
Logitech G435 $79 Lightweight, 18h battery
Corsair HS55 Wireless Core $79 PC, PS5, PS4, Mobile
SteelSeries Arctis Nova 3X $90 Mid-range, multi-platform
EarFun Air Pro 4+ $100 Gaming earbuds
HyperX Cloud Flight 2 $110 Spatial audio
Razer BlackShark V3 $120 Best overall wireless
Turtle Beach Atlas Air $150 Best open-back design
Fractal Scape (Audeze) $199.99 High-end planar magnetic
SteelSeries Arctis Nova Pro $220 Best battery life (~220h)
Audeze Maxwell $299 Best high-end audio
SteelSeries Arctis Nova Pro (Retail) $349.99 – $399.99 Premium competition
Astro A50 X $600 Simultaneous Bluetooth + 2.4GHz

Battery life varies wildly in gaming headsets. The Logitech G435 lasts about 18 hours, which means mid-week charging. The SteelSeries Arctis Nova Pro stretches to around 220 hours, so you can go weeks between charges. Know your tolerance for plugging things in before you pick.

Consumer & Music Wireless Headphones: What You Pay for Listening

Music-focused wireless headphones range from under $80 to $799. The leap from $80 to $300 gets you genuinely good active noise cancellation and better build quality. The leap from $300 to $799 buys luxury materials and refined tuning — worth it if you listen critically, wasted money if you just want decent sound on the train.

  • Under $80: Edifier W830NB ($79, noise-canceling, 265g) and 1More Sonoflow Pro HQ51 ($89) give you solid sound and ANC for the price.
  • $89 – $200: 1More Sonoflow Pro HQ51, JBL Live 780NC, and Beats Solo 4 ($200) offer better build and tuning. The Beats Solo 4 adds USB-C audio for lossless playback.
  • ~$300: Sony WH-1000XM5 sits here as the previous flagship — excellent ANC and sound, now a value pick since the XM6 released in 2025.
  • $799: Bowers & Wilkins PX8 S2 is the premium ceiling — leather, aluminum, exceptional detail. The PX7 S3 is its more affordable sibling in the same family.

Price Summary by Category

Category Price Range Typical Buyer
Basic PC wireless headset $29 – $79 Casual home use, occasional calls
Business/UC office headset $188 – $345 Remote worker, call center, Teams user
Mid-range gaming headset $80 – $150 Regular gamer, wants low latency
High-end gaming headset $150 – $399 Competitive gamer, audiophile gaming
Premium gaming headset $400 – $600 Enthusiast, multi-device pro
Consumer music headphones $79 – $300 Daily listener, noise cancellation
Premium audiophile headphones $300 – $799 Critical listener, wants luxury build

For most people, a solid mid-range buy lands between $80 and $150 for gaming or $200 to $300 for office UC headsets. That range avoids the failures of budget models without paying for premium materials you won’t notice in everyday use.

FAQs

Do wireless headsets cost more than wired ones?

Yes, usually by about $40 to $100 for comparable audio quality. The premium covers the battery, Bluetooth or 2.4 GHz chip, and the microphone components. A $50 wired headset often sounds similar to an $80 wireless model.

Why do business headsets cost more than gaming headsets?

Business UC headsets include certified compatibility with platforms like Microsoft Teams, physical mute buttons, wideband audio for voice clarity, and DECT base stations that support longer range and multi-device switching. Gaming headsets spend their budget on spatial audio drivers and low-latency chips instead.

Can I use a gaming headset for office calls?

Yes, but the microphone quality may be less natural-sounding than a dedicated business headset, and you won’t have Teams-specific controls unless the model explicitly supports it. For occasional calls it works fine; for eight-hour meeting days a UC headset serves better.

Is the $799 Bowers & Wilkins headset worth the price?

Only if high-end audio detail, leather build, and brand prestige matter to you. The $300 Sony WH-1000XM6 matches it on noise cancellation and comes close on sound quality. Most listeners will be happier saving the $500.

Does Xbox support all wireless gaming headsets?

No. Xbox requires headsets with specific wireless licensing or a 2.4 GHz dongle that the console recognizes. Models like the Astro A50 X are explicitly Xbox-compatible. Standard Bluetooth-only headsets do not work with Xbox.

References & Sources

Mo Maruf
Founder & Lead Editor

Mo Maruf

I created WellFizz to bridge the gap between vague wellness advice and actionable solutions. My mission is simple: to decode the research and give you practical tools you can actually use.

Beyond the data, I am a passionate traveler. I believe that stepping away from the screen to explore new environments is essential for mental clarity and physical vitality.

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