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Nothing Ear (a) review: You don’t need expensive earbuds


Nothing has made a name for itself by offering great value and daring product designs. That continues with a new addition to their Ear lineup, the Nothing Ear (a). Launched alongside the Ear (Nothing dropped numeric designations this year), Nothing Ear (a) is the successor to the Ear (Stick) and Ear (1). The Ear (2024) is designed for serious audio enthusiasts, while the Ear (a) was built with the everyday listener in mind.

In addition to the black and white colorways of previous Ear models of the past, 2024 gets a striking new yellow Nothing Ear (a) and matching case. Although, unlike its big sibling Ear, this case is USB-C charging only, although it is smaller than previous-gen designs, with an updated interior layout.

Nothing Ear (a) TWS earbuds in yellow

(Image credit: Tshaka Armstrong)

“Low” price, Hi-Res

Nothing Ear (a) TWS earbuds in yellow

(Image credit: Tshaka Armstrong)

Let’s get right to it, shall we? Nothing’s Ear (a) has really solid sound reproduction at only $99. I listened to them using the supported LDAC codec, connected to a Pixel 7 Pro, streaming music from Tidal, and playing locally stored FLAC files through VLC media player. I listened to everything from Paul Simon to Art Blakey to Gravediggaz and threw in some EDM and Trap to test that sub-bass.