Urbeats3 reviews: Modest earbuds from a flashy brand

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Modest earbuds from a flashy brand

The Beats urBeats3 is a fashionable option for listeners with a death grip on wired audio. They don’t have many tricks up their sleeves, but the urBeats3 is one of Beats’ more affordable products. Let’s see how the urBeats3 hold up in 2020.

Editor’s note: this Beats urBeats3 review was updated on July 21, 2020, to include information about how the earbuds compare to the Beats Powerbeats and Beats Powerbeats Pro.

Who are the urBeats3 for?

No matter what ear tips I tried, the urBeats3 came loose.

These wired earbuds are for anyone and feature a more subtle footprint relative to other Beats products. The angled nozzles make longer listening sessions comfortable, and the tangle-resistant cable is nice for those moments the ‘buds are mindlessly tossed into a bag. You can get away with lightly exercising in these but be wary of any intense workouts as the urBeats3 ‘buds aren’t IP certified.

How are urBeats3 built?

The 3. 5mm plug is met with a hard plastic and silicone stress reliever.

The signature Beats red flat cable effectively resists tangling but doesn’t completely neutralize them. However, if the cable does happen to tie itself into a knot, it’s easy to undo. Halfway up the ribbon cable is a black Y-split where it diverges into two parts. When out and about, the lack of cable management is frustrating. During testing, I ran the wire under my shirt to prevent it from catching on clothes or my backpack.

Both housings have a bullet-esque build and are brandished with the recognizable lower-case “b.” Inside each chamber is a dynamic driver that pumps sound out through the angled nozzle and into the ear canal. The ergonomic design is comfortable. Unfortunately, though, none of the included ear tips fit my ears well, resulting in an unstable fit. If you run into the same issue, be sure to peruse some third-party ear tip options.

Android users are unable to control volume via the in-line remote.

Down the left line sits an integrated mic and three-button remote module, which feels cheap relative that of the BeatsX. Listeners may use it to control playback and take calls. If you have an Android phone, volume controls won’t work. On the flipside, Android users can access Google Assistant without issue.

The magnetic housings are nice but don’t make up for the lack of a sliding management system.

Microphone quality is a pleasant surprise. My voice was only slightly muffled when speaking with friends, and the microphone placement effectively negates any potential noises from head-bobbing. Background noises are slightly diminished, but if a car revs its engine by you, it’ll be relayed to your speaking partner.

The urBeats3 earphones connect straight to your phone

The Beats urBeats3 integrated control module feels cheap, but the microphone quality is surprisingly good.

Since these are wired earbuds, you don’t have to keep your eyes peeled for high-quality Bluetooth codecs. That said, listening will be a more enjoyable process if your phone has a native headphone jack rather than requiring a USB-C dongle adapter. The actual plug is gold-plated and feels sturdy enough, but an L-shaped jack is preferred.

How do the earbuds sound?

While the frequency response is more neutral-leaning than I anticipated from Beats, clarity is deficient. Even in my quiet apartment with the earbuds jammed down my ear canals, detail is just ok. Generally speaking, bass is still the most prominent characteristic of the urBeats3 sound signature. To get the strongest bass response, make sure the ear tips form a cogent seal as this also promotes better isolation.

Lows, mids, and highs

The Y-split offers a fair amount of flex while remaining sturdy.

Gregory Alan Isakov’s song Chemicals begins with a solo guitar alternating between C-F chords with light piano playing to underscore it. Even without vocals or the secondary guitar, which enters later, the guitar’s clarity is lackluster. Listen for the F chord at 0:03, the harmonic resonance is hardly audible over the piano which, again, is just accompaniment and is not being played powerfully.

At 0:55 the first cymbal hit and kick drum are heard. The former is incredibly difficult to hear with the urBeats3 and may even be missed if you’re not actively listening for it since it’s masked by the kick drum, which isn’t meant to be overwhelming yet sounds that way due to the sloppy audio reproduction.

Sound quality isn’t all negative, though; Isakov’s voice is reproduced surprisingly well particularly the when his register goes low at the last utterance of “gone” in the song’s final moments. If you’re a general consumer who isn’t too concerned about sound quality the urBeats3 are fine, but if you’re a discriminant listener, they won’t do.

Should you buy the Beats urBeats3 in 2020?

For just under $60, the Beats urBeats3 is one of the most affordable products the company offers.

Most people know in an instance how they feel about Beats; the company knows how to elicit a visceral reaction—positive or negative. Rather than try to sway you in one direction or the other, I’ll be straight with you: the urBeats3 isn’t a great deal for the price.

Listeners aren’t afforded accessories aside from two additional pairs of ear tips, and sound quality is little more than mediocre. That said, we consumers don’t typically buy Beats for the sound quality. We buy them because we like the design. If that’s what draws you to the urBeats3, more power to you, just don’t expect them to sound incredible or be the most durable. Now, say you’re set on wired earbuds but aren’t satisfied with these. We’ve compiled a list of the best earbuds to ease the research process.

Consider the Beats Powerbeats instead

Lily Katz / SoundGuys

Beats redesigned its Powerbeats earphones, so they have a more mature appearance than before.

The Beats Powerbeats are a mix between the Beats Powerbeats Pro and Beats Powerbeats3, because they use a design identical to the Pro model, while keeping the cable that joins the two ear pieces. The earphones are water-resistant and last for ~15 hours on a single charge; plus they top up quickly via the included Lightning cable. Since Beats is now an Apple subsidiary, its new products include the h2 chip, which means the Beats Powerbeats feature hands-free siri access just like when you use the AirPods with iPhones.

Next: Best iPhone earbuds

Beats by Dre urBeats3 Review

Beats by Dre headphones are impossible to miss. No other brand, with the possible exception of Apple and Starbucks, has become so ubiquitous and so recognizable. The urBeats3 in-ear headphones are among the company’s top-sellers, and we recently spent a month with a pair to find out why. It is a month we will regret until the end of time. In this review, we break down the sound, design, comfort and fit, packaging and accessories, specs and more of the Beats by Dre urBeats3. To see alternatives, check out our list of the best earbuds.
 

Sound

Low-End (Bass)

It would be wrong to state that the Beats by Dre urBeats 3 are a total disaster. On the scale of catastrophes, they are a serious car crash rather than, say, a nuclear explosion. That’s because there is at least one aspect that they can be recommended for, and that’s bass. Beats have always put their reputation in their low-end, and the urBeats don’t let the team down. The tiny dynamic drivers push out bass that feels tight, meaty, and defined. It’s often so powerful that it causes actual movement and vibration of the buds themselves. Not dramatically so – they aren’t going to be leaping from your ears or anything – but if you crank them up for a bass-heavy track, you’ll definitely feel it.

Compare that effect with the Apple AirPods Pro. Yes, they may cost $175 more ($235 to the urBeats3’s $60) but in terms of low-end, we prefer the Beats. A lot of this is down to personal preference, and it certainly wouldn’t be fair to say that the Airpods deliver bad bass. It just doesn’t the impact and punch that the urBeats have. The urBeats are flat-out fun – and if you do listen to EDM or hip-hop, you’ll definitely get a kick out of these. Or you will, until you realise you’ve spent over $100 on a pair of in-ear headphones that, bass aside, sound absolutely god-awful.
 

High-End (Treble) and Mids

It really cannot be understated just how utterly appalling the overall sound of the urBeats is. The powerful bass might be fun for a while, but the rest of the audio made us cringe. Repeatedly. The midrange – where elements like vocals and keyboards sit – was weirdly recessed, sounding as if it was coming from a transistor radio buried at the bottom of the ocean. It felt so wonky and uncomfortable that we actually tried to get a better fit, in case it would improve things. It didn’t. The highs, too, were a disaster: as sharp and unpleasant as an opinion from your mother-in-law. Then again, we shouldn’t be surprised. When a company allegedly uses no more than $10 of material to build their headphones, the sound is going to match that price point. And how’s this for hysterical? The company who performed the test discussed in that link subsequently discovered their test model was a counterfeit, so they won’t and bought a confirmed genuine article – only to discover that the material value in both was roughly the same? Ouch.

What’s astounding about this is that the urBeats3 are not just terrible in and of themselves; they are terrible in comparison to just about everything else. That includes models cheaper than them. Take, for example, the Bose Soundsport In-Ears. Those cost the same as the Beats, at $50, and are better in almost every conceivable way. Yes, you lose out on the massive bass, but it’s not like the Soundsports deliver bad low-end; for most people, it’ll be perfectly fine. And it comes with an overall sound that, while not incredible, does a perfectly acceptable job.
 

Soundstage

This is where we talk about how the urBeats3 position instruments in a song. Or we would, if they did. See, you want a wide soundstage in a pair of headphones; the more spread-out the elements of the track feel, the more they seem to come by different directions, the more immersive the experience will be. And the urBeats 3 just…whiff. The songs we listened to felt squashed and angry, as if they’d been shoved into a pair of pants far too small for them. Everything felt aggressively panned hard left or hard right. It is absolutely astounding that these in-ear headphones cost as much as they do.

We’ll go further. We can propose a pair of in-ear headphones that not only sound infinitely better than anything Beats by Dre has ever produced, but cost six times less. Go buy a pair of Venture Electronics Monk Plus in-ears – seriously, do it now, they cost less than $10 – and tell us we’re wrong. They offer sound that is leagues ahead of the Beats, with construction and build quality that are comparable, and for a fraction of the price. This is the very definition of a no-brainer. The VE Monk Plus are the great open secret in the audio world, and they offer far more than the Beats ever will.

However, one thing worth noting: they have no in-line mic, whereas the Beats do. The urBeats3 call quality was acceptable, but nothing more.

Design

Cable Noise

Let’s talk about microphonics. You’re going to be experiencing a hell of lot of them if you buy these. So, it’s worth getting out of the way. If you ever bump the cable of a pair of headphones, or move it against clothing, and get a kind of rustling noise in your ears, you’ve experienced microphonics. They are annoying, and can be frequent – especially for in-ear headphones, which are often used while you’re on the move. Microphonics can be avoided by crafting the cable out of high-quality, movement-resistant material – you can already see where this is going. The slightest movement, the merest brush of the cable against a shirt or jacket, and the noise was everywhere. Brutally-put: it sucked. Admittedly, it’s a common problem in this price range, but it’s certainly not without solution. Take the MEZE 11 Neo (full review here), which not only almost match the Beats on price, at $59 versus $50, but don’t have significant microphonics. And yes, they sound much better, because of course they do.

These microphonics also mean using the urBeats3 in the gym is not an option, for one thing. And, while Beats don’t disclose the IPX rating of the urBeats3 – which tells you how waterproof and dustproof they are – it doesn’t actually matter. There’s no way to keep the cable still, no shirt clip or handy way to arrest the movement of the silicon. Forget running. Forget cycling. Forget weightlifting. It’s just not a good idea.

Looks and Build Quality

If you like rubbery silicon, you’re in for a good time. And in all fairness, the design of the urBeats3 isn’t terrible. There are some nice touches, like the magnets embedded in the housing, meaning you can snap these together around your neck. They’re also relatively lightweight, at less than an ounce. The design is virtually identical to the wireless BeatsX, which you can buy for an additional $50, if you’re feeling masochistic.

The problem is, everything just feels so cheap. If these headphones cost $20, we wouldn’t question it – would welcome it, even, with the understanding that they aren’t asking a lot. But to charge $60 for rustley, awkward bits of silicon and plasticky buds that feel as if they’re about to collapse just from the pressure of existing, is a joke. If you’ll permit us another comparison: Apple’s Earpods, which are arguably even more ubiquitous than the urBeats3, manage to get build quality right. And they cost $27! We don’t deploy exclamation marks often on this site, but the Beats earbuds have earned them. We should give out an award: The Exclamation Mark Trophy For The Headphones Most Likely To Be Put Down The Garbage Disposal.

Controls

You control the urBeats3 by means of a set of in-line buttons, containing a pair of volume clickers and a single, central button to handle the other functions, including activating Siri. This function is labelled RemoteTalk. We’re Android users and the majority of our testing took place on a OnePlus phone, but a friend with an iPhone let us test this out. Siri responded quickly and cleanly, and we had no problem using it. That being said, the actual buttons themselves had some issues. The volume clickers were fine; they felt responsive and easy, and we never had trouble using them. The RemoteTalk button, though? Yeesh. It felt soft, with a long travel time, and we always felt like we had to reseat our thumb to properly push it. In-line controls are surprisingly hard to get right, but even this feels like it’s a lot worse than it needs to be. And yes, the cable tangles. Of course it tangles. It would be headline news if it didn’t tangle.

One note, since we’re talking about the cable. The urBeats3 come in two variants: a standard 3.5mm jack version, which is the one we tested, and which plugs into standard headphone jacks, and a Lightning Connector version. The latter works for iPhones exclusively – the newest versions lack a headphone jack. Fortunately, the price ($60) is identical for both versions. So, all you need to do – if you actually pull the trigger on these – is pick the one that suits you best. Come to think of it, pulling the trigger on the urBeats3 isn’t a bad idea, if your garbage disposal rejects them…

Newer Earbuds From Beats by Dre

One thing to note is that the urBeats3 are quite old now – we first reviewed them here back in 2018. If you’re thinking of buying them, you might want to consider some of Beats’ new options. They’ve gotten a lot better over time, releasing some products which we consider to be genuinely good. The best of these are the Powerbeats Pro, a pair of true wireless earbuds which get so many small things right that we genuinely enjoyed listening to them. The sound is good overall, and frequently great in spurts.

However, one thing that the company has done is moved away from wallet friendly prices, like that of the urBeats3. They are pitched as a premium audio company now, with prices to match – the Powerbeats Pro cost around $250. If you are looking for a pair of earbuds at the same price as the urBeats3, try the Bose SoundSport In-Ear, which do a much better job
 

Comfort & Fit

Surprisingly, it wasn’t tricky to get good fit and isolation with the urBeats3. We actually found that the stock tips, which were already attached, did the job fine. If that wasn’t the case, the urBeats3 come with a huge selection of different tip sizes – which we’ll talk about more in a bit. What we did find to be a problem with the urBeats3 was that they become significantly uncomfortable after a few hours. That’s something they have in common with earlier models like the urBeats2 Even after experimenting with different tip sizes, this remained a problem – although smaller tips definitely did help a little. By the way, if you’re curious about the differences between versions 2 and 3 of the urBeats, you’re talking a color scheme, some additional tips, and Siri functionality. That’s about it.

Packaging & Accessories

We actually quite like the case supplied with the urBeats3. It’s a simple, pocket-sized silicon pouch with a gap in one side, and it felt like a friendly, intuitive way to carry the headphones. We will be purloining it for other models as soon as we’re done reviewing these. It’s a significant improvement on cases from other manufacturers – like, for example, Focal, who make much more elite gear. Their budget earbuds, the Spark (full review here), come with a zippered case that feels fiddly and annoying. The urBeats3 case is much better. You could make an argument that zippered cases protect earbuds from the elements, but unless you’re waving your urBeats3 case around in a thunderstorm, or letting things leak in your bag, we can’t see this being a huge issue. The case here is much simpler to use.

Packaging is unremarkable, with the earbuds stashed in a cardboard insert, visible behind transparent plastic. Inside, you’ll find not only the buds and the case, but also a selection of tips and wings, designed to help you get the perfect fit. Swapping these out is no problem – a quick twist and pull will do the trick. And in an unusual case where more packaging is a good thing; these tips and wings come in their own plastic covers. If the stock tips fit, as they did with us, you never have to take them out their packaging. Good to know that someone at Beats by Dre was awake while designing the packaging.

What We Like

  • The bass of the urBeats3 is enjoyable: fat and fun, with a good level of punch.
  • The case the earbuds come in is pretty good, and has zero moving parts.
  • The design is workable enough with some handy features, like the magnets that allow you to snap the buds together.

What We Don’t

  • The overall sound of the urBeats3 is atrocious, with horrible mids and tinny highs. Not even the bass is good enough to save it.
  • They are vastly overpriced, and are outclassed by earbuds that are much cheaper. You are, essentially, paying anywhere between $20 and $110 to tell the world you like Dr Dre.
  • The cable rustles endlessly whenever it is touched, making it hard to hear the music.
     

Comparison Table

Headphones Price Category Assistant Drivers Impedance Weight
Beats by Dre urBeats3 $60 Wired Siri Unknown Unknown 0. 3oz
Bose Soundsport Free $199 Wireless No Unknown Unknown 0.63oz
Apple AirPods Pro $235 Wireless Siri Unknown Unknown 0.14oz
VE Monk Plus $10 Wired No 15.4mm 64Ω 0.3oz
Beats by Dre BeatsX $100 Wireless Siri Unknown Unknown 0.3oz

The Competition

True wireless earbuds – buds without any cable – are ubiquitous enough now that we feel comfortable comparing them to wired earbuds like the urBeats3. Bose make some excellent alternatives. Previously, we would have matched the urBeats3 up with something like the Bose Soundsport In-Ears – but those are quite old now. So how about their replacement, the Bose Soundsport Free? It’s true that they’re significantly more expensive than the $60 urBeats, at $199, but there’s a quantum leap in overall sound quality – not to mention useability. These are forward-thinking buds that will last you forever, and they should be a strong contender for anyone looking for earbuds. No insane bass, of course, but you can’t have everything,….

They aren’t a direct comparison, being entirely wireless, but it’s worth talking about the Apple AirPods Pro – not least because one of the most common searches on Google is urBeats3 vs Airpods. They cost a good deal more, at $235, and come with their own hangups and issues – cleaning them, for one thing, is a lot harder than it is with the urBeats, due to earwax being pushed into the tiny speaker grilles. However, they’re still very excellent. They offer much brighter sound than the urBeats3, and aren’t going to impress anybody looking for heavy bass: the two products are apples and oranges here. One thing they do offer that the urBeats3 emphatically do not is noise-canceling. In fact, the cancellation is genuinely excellent.

Or you could ignore both those options, save a ton of money, and get to look smug when you realize how good your sound is by buying the Venture Electronics Monk Plus. They are slightly different to the urBeats3, in that they sit balanced in the outer ear rather than inserted; we’ve never had an issue with them falling out, but it’s worth bearing in mind. They also have no controls on their cable, and their looks aren’t great. But the sound is… incredible. Just incredible. These are a pair of in-ear headphones that rival models with three-figure price tags. At $50, they would be a bargain. At $10? They’re practically an impulse buy. Everybody should own a pair, and if the world was just, Dr Dre would be concerned.

And finally: the BeatsX. If you find yourself gripped by a notion that what would improve the urBeats3 would be making them wireless, you’d be wrong. The BeatsX make many of the same errors that the urBeats3 make, although they do have at least one advantage: no microphonics. That means that, with no cable to bump, the sound is a little bit clearer. But you get the same plastic-and-silicone nastiness, the same issues with price (they are $100 compared to $60 for the urBeats3), and the same accessories. They are just not worth it. If you haven’t picked up the message in the review yet – if you skipped to this part, for instance – it is this. Don’t buy Beats. They are an abomination.

A last word. It’s likely the urBeats won’t be around much longer. They were released in September 2017, and haven’t received an update since then. Apple, who own the Beats brand, have largely ignored it since their big headline acquisition. That’s not just because of the success of their true wireless AirPods, but also because there are rumours that Apple itself wants to take the position previously held by Beats in the headphones market. Not only are the AirPods 2 imminent at the time of writing, but the company is slated to release a pair of over-ear headphones too.