For over a decade, Sony has been taking direct aim at Bose’s noise-canceling domination. Every year or two, Japan’s best and brightest engineers revise its flagship WH-1000 noise-canceling over-ears to beat out whatever the folks in Boston have cooked up, to great effect. The battle has led to some of the best headphones in history, with one or both brands topping our list of the best wireless headphones in nearly endless succession.
With Sony’s new WH-1000XM6 ("1000X mark six”), we’re now half a dozen iterations into a pair that began life as a good pair of headphones. This new version uses that experience to create something astonishing. You get a dramatically refined sound signature and streamlined design; you get 12 microphones and, Sony claims, seven times the processing speed of the previous model (9/10, WIRED Recommends). It's enough to have even the famously superlative-averse brand calling the WH-1000XM6—accurately, in my experience—the best noise canceling headphones on Earth.
If you are shopping for a pair of premium over-ears for work or travel, or just to escape your neighbor’s annoying dog while you watch Netflix, these are probably the best all-around wireless headphones right now. They cost $50 more at launch than their predecessors, but they're more than worth the extra cash.
Recent Revisions
There are two distinct eras of Sony’s WH-1000 line visually, with the latest starting with a refined, streamlined look in the WH-1000XM5—abandoning the more businesslike Bose design it used for generations one through four.
Visually, the latest version is even prettier than the model that came before, with clever folding earcups that help them fit more easily inside a streamlined hard case that now uses a magnetic clasp instead of a zipper.
It’s a sleek hard-shell protector that comes with a clever pocket inside for cables and adapters like most high-end headphones offer these days. A slightly protruding clasp at the edge of the case keeps it from ever tumbling open.