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JBL

JBL LIVE 300, Premium True Wireless Headphone, Blue

  • Based on 11,669 reviews
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Color: Blue


Features

  • JBL SIGNATURE SOUND: Small in size, but packing serious power, JBL LIVE 300TWS bluetooth headphones deliver the audio you expect from JBL
  • Product Note : If the size of the earbud tips does not match the size of your ear canals or the headset is not worn properly in your ears, you may not obtain the correct sound qualities or call performance. Change the earbud tips to ones that fit more snugly in your ears
  • AMBIENT AWARE and TALKTHRU: Control the world around you. Instantly move from absolute music immersion to focus on your surroundings with Ambient Aware. Chat with your friends without removing your bluetooth headphones with TalkThru. Just swipe on the wireless earbuds to activate them
  • UP TO 20 HOURS OF BATTERY: Never be without your music. JBL LIVE 300TWS bluetooth headphones give you up to 6 hours of playback on a single charge. Pop them into the charging case for up to an additional 14 hours of listening. Get a one-hour boost in just 10 minutes
  • TRUE WIRELESS EARBUDS: JBL LIVE 300TWS bluetooth headphones are totally wireless, with nothing to hold you back or tie you down
  • STEREO CALLS: Wherever you are in the world, and whatever you are doing, take your music along for the ride and stay connected with perfect, stereo clear calls with no background noise. Discover total listening freedom with hands-free functionality and no distractions with all-access touch control

Description

JBL LIVE 300TWS - Own your space. Stay connected to your music and your world with JBL LIVE 300TWS in-ear bluetooth headphones. True wireless earbuds are free from wires for ultimate freedom, with incredible JBL Signature Sound. Tune in or out with noise control, stay alert to your surroundings with Ambient Aware or use TalkThru to chat with friends, all without removing your bluetooth headphones. Voice Assistant, hands-free calling and volume are all accessible via the touch controls for extra convenience. Speed charge gives you a boost fast, so you will never be without your music. Choose from a range of colors to find your perfect pair. Small in size, not power.


Product Dimensions: 3.94 x 1.81 x 6.3 inches


Item Weight: 2.32 ounces


Item model number: JBLLIVE300TWSBLUAM


Batteries: 1 Lithium Polymer batteries required. (included)


Is Discontinued By Manufacturer: No


Date First Available: July 1, 2019


Manufacturer: JBL


Country of Origin: China


Frequently asked questions

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Top Amazon Reviews


  • Sound Quality and Fit are great, everything else not so much
Color: Purple
From user reviews on Google and Amazon to Flossy Carter, the realest reviewer in the game, the JBL Live 300s have been positively received among the music-listening community. At originally $150, these buds went on sale for $75, which made them a must-buy to try them out. However, upon using them for a full week, I have to say that I am disappointed with these earbuds. While the most important aspects (Sound Quality and Fit/Comfort) meet expectations, the overall functionality and daily usability of these buds miss the mark. Positives: Sound Quality -- Out of the box, the sound quality is pretty good. The bass is amazing without distorting sound, but from a clarity aspect it misses the mark. However, those problems can be remedied by downloading the JBL Headphones app, which features a customizable EQ. You can create multiple sliders to tune the sound, but I kept it simple by creating 5 sliders. This allowed me to tune the settings to my liking, which means lowering the mids and accentuating the highs. The app could be more intuitive; the best EQ customizations allow users to hear the changes as the sliders are being moved rather than after the user has stopped moving them. However, I cannot complain as this is a rare feature among true wireless earbuds. Not even Apple or Samsung allows full customization. In comparison with buds I have tried, I prefer the customized sound over the AirPods Pro's "adaptive" EQ (marketing BS) and the loudness and bass exceeds the Galaxy Buds Plus. However, the sound isn't as clean as Samsung, and on all fronts the JBL cannot compare to the Jabra Elite Active 75t. Fit & Comfort -- When I first place the JBLs in my ears, they seem like they will not fit due to the sheer size of them. After a few seconds, they feel very good in my ears. They stay in place during weight training and cardio exercises without feeling heaving or intrusive in my ears. I also have issues with wax buildup even after cleaning my wars, but these buds stay securely still without needing adjustment. It helps that these buds have wings for stability. In comparison to other buds that I have tried, the JBL offers one of the best fits. They stay in my ear more securely than AirPods Pros and Galaxy Buds Plus, which both needed constant adjustment due to wax buildup. The fit still isn't as stable or comfortable as the Jabras, but they are still among the best. IP Sweat Resistance -- If you are using true wireless earbuds for workouts and cardio, the minimum rating you should aim for is an IPX4 certification. This ensures that your buds can handle sweat as long as you clean them after use. This does not mean they have come into contact with water, but that is never an issue with me as I stay indoors. The Galaxy Buds Plus only had an IPX2 rating, which always made me worry about having to clean them every 15 minutes to prevent internal damage. The JBL is effective at blocking sweat from entering the ear canals, but in the case that it does, you will not have to worry about immediate damage. Just be sure to wipe them after each use to prevent damage from possibly occurring. USB-C Charging -- One of the JBL brand's weak points in the true wireless segment, among many, has been charging. Most of their buds lack wireless charging, which is not a big deal, but many of them also still use Micro USB, which at this point is unacceptable. USB-C will not be a concern as the charging case for the JBL Live 300 does charge using these cables. The charging port even has a light that flashes to show when the buds are charging and when the case is low on battery. It is a useful feature; just put them away at night as they can be bright. Negatives: Build Quality -- A major weak point of the true wireless products from the JBL brand is build quality. The buds and case with the Live 300s felt flimsy and cheap. The buds also stick out of your ear too much, which isn't the biggest dealer breaker but certainly aids to making the buds look cheap. Case Size -- The case is way too big and bulky to carry around comfortably in any size pants save for the biggest pocket in your cargo trousers. Few brands have been able to really nail a beautiful and functional case size. In fact, among earbuds that I have tried, only Apple and Jabra manage to have such cases that nail both categories. But the JBL case is among the biggest in the industry, which does not make them pocketable or the most portable among the competition. Battery Life -- You would think that I big case would translate to excellent battery life, but the case can only add an extra 14 hours to the buds' pretty average 6 hours of battery life. Also, these are just claims; among real-world testing, I can assure you that the JBLs do not meet the company's claims. To add to further insult, the buds will not work at all if the case is depleted. Maybe I got unlucky with my unit, but I remember a user having this issue with heir unit when trying to sell it on Mercari. Even though the buds indicated a battery life on my phone when the case was near depleted, they would not turn on again once the battery life in the case was gone. I have to charge the case before I could use the buds again. This would translate to a horrible battery life, which makes its daily usability very poor. Voice Assistant functionality -- The box and online description state that these buds have connectivity with Google Assistant and Alexa. The Google Assistant did not work with my iPhone 8 Plus. That may be an issue with my phone. However, the Alexa connectivity is very poor. The Alexa app needs to be open in order for the function to work. This is not the biggest issue, as it can be summoned while the app is in the background or when the screen is off. However, the function only works when connected to WiFi, which isn't always available when traveling. Furthermore, when I do summon Alexa, the buds disconnect from the phone. It requires me to place the buds back in the case and take them out of the case in order to reconnect. After reconnecting, the left and right earbuds cut off audio back and forth at different times for ten seconds before settling back into a stable connection. The remedy is to just ignore the Alexa feature, which I do, but I would have hoped for a more polished experience. Touch Controls -- To control the playback and volume on my device, these buds use touch controls to perform these functions. Through the week of owning them, I can say that only the play/pause and skip functions work properly. I cannot repeat a track without having playback interrupted, only for the buds to require another tap to resume the music. Volume controls require a swipe, but they never work. It only pauses the music or makes a sound without doing anything. Overall, the touch controls are just not intuitive. Connection issues -- As mentioned before, these buds have connection issues that randomly happen. Apart from occurring when trying to operate other functions, the audio will sometimes cut in and out for no reason. I am not surrounded by any other devices or microwaves, yet the disconnect happens more frequently than I would like. When reflecting back at this review, I see that my major gripes are just inconveniences rather than complete failures with these earbuds, save for the depleted case and touch control issues. It just surprises me that these buds were originally $150, which is an insane amount for the quality you get. Even at the next cheapest price, at $120, they do not justify the price. The new price of $75 makes these buds worth the issues for the money. However, as someone who wants the complete package and requires excellent sound quality, I would rather pay up for a more premium experience rather than have a budget-friendly pair that I will just find gripes about. In this world, we need to be content with what we have. Even if our house isn't the biggest or our car is the most technologically advanced, we should be grateful for having a functioning mode of transportation that we own or just having a roof over our head. But those are things that would cost thousands more to upgrade just to get basically the same functionality. In the world of headphones, it is worth paying up for the best because we will then complain less. Upgrades also cost less than $100 more than the initial price points of lower-priced competitors, so it won't leave you financially strained. Among all the true wireless earbuds that I have used, the Jabra Elite Active 75t's are the very best because they have the best of everything, from sound quality and durability to battery life, not to mention decent noise cancellation. For me, the JBL Live 300s would be the best earbuds under $100, but I would rather pay up for the best overall. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on November 12, 2020 by Denny Mathews Denny Mathews

  • Adequate Sound, Hard to Use
Color: Black
The JBL LIVE 300TWS earbuds ($99) are impressive. For comfort, they get an A, being light, well-designed, and with multiple eartips and wingtips. You will surely find your size. Unless the comfort is good, nothing else matters. They are handsome as an artifact, but they do stick out of your ears more noticeably than I would have thought. The case is a largish, smooth pillbox, easily carryable. Front and back look the same, so after peering closely, you must use a fingernail to open it. It’s too slick otherwise. The case is the charger and comes with a USB-C cable. Charging is quick and battery life is in the multiple hours – no problems. There’s no battery-life indicator, so I guess I’m supposed to guess when it’s low. Removing the earbuds from the case is like picking up half a split pea from the kitchen floor. There’s nothing to grab. A small annoyance. At least you can’t put them into the case wrong. They only fit one way. Bluetooth pairing with the sound-source device is quick and reliable. This is another feature that has to work right or nothing else matters. However… It is a pain in the neck to change devices because like nearly all earbuds, they can only pair to one source at a time. To leave my desk and switch to my phone, I have to delete the JBL listing from my pc’s Bluetooth choices. Just selecting “unpair” or "disconnect" is not enough, and turning off Bluetooth is not even enough. Powering off the pc altogether is not enough. I must use the Settings/Bluetooth screen to remove (delete) the JBLs and pretend they never existed. Otherwise, they won’t pair with anything else. I guess that means they’ll never cheat on me. Then I have to take the earbuds out of my head, put them back in the case, start Bluetooth pairing on the phone, and force the JBLs to start pairing again by pressing the button in the case. The JBLs appear on the phone screen and I select them. It’s a tedious ordeal to move from pc to phone. I think all earbuds are that way. Given the state of the industry, the JBL is no worse than others. Pairing does work if you perform the correct ritualistic dance. The sound: It’s impressive. The speakers are designed by Harmon. I did not expect this good of a sound from such a small speaker. The experience is crisp and clear, with a velvety black background and good stereo separation. It exceeds my expectations. However… The music seems to be across the room, not inside my head. These are tiny earbuds, so I it’s hard to complain, but my subjective sense is that the frequency response range is just a little clipped. It feels slightly narrower than the standard 20 to 20K Hz. On the plus side, that means the bass is not overwhelming as it usually is in Sony products. Plenty of bass comes through without boring a tunnel through the middle of my head. On the high end, I feel a slight deficiency. Plenty of high end is there, but maybe not all the overtones I would like. I could be wrong; this is just an impression. Midrange seems about right. However… The software app that might let me adjust the sound profile is so terrible that I found it next to useless. I struggled to make the app “connect” to the JBL earbuds. It turns out I had to delete (yes delete) the JBLs from my computer and shut off the computer’s Bluetooth, and wait a half hour before I could make the the app connect to the earbuds. That is really not convenient. No amount of ritualistic dancing would make this connection work better. I’m not even sure what the problem is. The (android) phone pairs to the headphones readily, so why does an app need to “pair” with anything? “Pairing” is a hardware protocol. I don’t know what the app wants. If you make any changes in the app settings, you don’t know if they had any effect until you exit the app, unpair the phone from the JBLs, restart Bluetooth on the computer, force the JBLs to enter pairing mode, wait for them to appear on the computer screen, and select them. It was basically an unusable procedure. I could find no help online. The reviews of the JBL app are uniformly negative, no surprise. It has a sound equalizer that lets you move the response curve up or down with a finger, so you could, for example boost the bass way up. But you’d have to be a sound engineer to know what you were doing. There are only two presets: Voice and Music. After you make any change at all, you must dance around the campfire again to reconnect to your sound source and listen to the effect of what you just did. You can connect to Google Assistant or Alexa with the app if you need voice commands (and if you also have GA or Alexa already installed and working). Supposedly you can customize, or “activate” the touch commands that let you control the volume by swiping the right earbud, but I never could figure out how to do that. After a great deal of fussing, I can still only control volume from my source device. That’s not ideal when I’m driving or typing, and it degrades the value of the JBL earbuds. It’s likely that you’re supposed to request volume control from your butlers, Alexa, or Google Assistant. However, I don’t keep any electronic staff because of privacy concerns. And they steal from you. Zoom and phone performance. Aside from an incredible amount of fussing to get the pairing right, performance on zoom and phone calls was satisfactory. I noticed no sound lag but a slight background echo. It was noticeable but tolerable. In the end, I sent the JBL Live 300 TWS back to Amazon. Thanks, Amazon, for a very generous and easy-to-use return policy. That’s why I buy there: no risk. I replaced the JBLs with a set of Galaxy Buds+, which are the same price and performed a lot better for my needs. The JBLs are a good wireless earbud and could work quite well for a lot of people. For me, the good, but not terrific sound, plus the poor app and the extremely tedious procedure for changing sources, made me decide to look at an alternative. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on December 21, 2020 by BillAdams

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