I Wore Sony’s New “Ear Jewelry” for a Couple Weeks: Sony LinkBuds Clip Review

Rating: ⭐⭐⭐⭐ (4/5) for Office/Commuting, ⭐⭐ (2/5) for Bassheads
Price: $229.99 USD
For the last ten years, audio companies have been engaged in a brutal war to completely plug our ear canals. We’ve had silicone tips, memory foam, and aggressive Active Noise Cancellation (ANC) designed to completely isolate us from the outside world.
But what if you actually need to hear the outside world? What if you want to listen to a podcast without getting hit by a Prius, or listen to Spotify without missing your boss calling your name?
Enter the Sony LinkBuds Clip (WF-LC900).
Sony has officially leaned into the “open-ear” revolution. Instead of plugging your ear, the Sony LinkBuds Clip attaches to your ear cartilage like a piece of high-tech jewelry. At $229.99 USD, Sony is positioning these as premium “always-on” wearables. I spent a week testing these Sony clips in loud coffee shops, windy streets, and quiet offices to see if they actually work.
Here is my honest, situational-awareness-approved Sony review.
Test 1: The “Clip” Architecture (Is it comfortable?)
The Claim: A barely-there, C-shaped cuff design for all-day wear.
The Reality: Sony nailed the ergonomics, but it takes practice to put them on.
The Sony LinkBuds Clip consists of two modules joined by a flexible bridge. The speaker sits just outside your ear canal, and the battery hides behind your earlobe acting as a counterweight.
- The Fit: Because the Sony design distributes the weight across your cartilage instead of jamming into your ear canal, “ear fatigue” is completely gone. After about 10 minutes, my brain forgot I was wearing them.
- Customization: Human ears are weirdly shaped. Sony smartly includes “Air Fitting Cushions” (little silicone sleeves) to adjust the grip tension.
- The Vibe: Available in Black, Greige, Green, and Lavender, the Sony LinkBuds Clip legitimately looks like modern jewelry.
Test 2: Sound Quality (Fighting the Laws of Physics)
The Claim: Premium Sony audio with DSEE upscaling.
The Reality: Phenomenal for vocals; terrible for heavy bass.
Let’s address the elephant in the room: open-ear headphones cannot trap air, which means physics dictates they cannot produce deep, rumbling sub-bass.
- The Mids and Highs: Sony tuned these to be incredibly articulate. If you listen to acoustic indie music, audiobooks, or vocal-heavy pop, the Sony LinkBuds Clip sounds brilliant, bright, and wide.
- The Sony DSEE Magic: Sony included their Digital Sound Enhancement Engine (DSEE) to digitally upscale compressed Spotify and Apple Music streams. It works, bringing out sparkling details in the upper frequencies.
- The Bass Limit: If you are expecting to feel the thump of a heavy hip-hop or EDM track, look elsewhere. Low-end frequencies escape into the air before they reach your eardrum.
Test 3: The Microphones (The Absolute Superpower)
The Claim: AI noise reduction and Bone Conduction sensors for flawless calls.
The Reality: The best telephonic experience on the market. Period.
This is where the Sony LinkBuds Clip justifies its $230 price tag. Sony trained its AI on over 500 million voice samples.
- The Tech: Sony uses standard microphones paired with a Bone Conduction sensor that rests against your ear. When you speak, the Sony sensor picks up the literal vibrations of your jawbone, which are immune to wind and background noise.
- The Real-World Test: I took a conference call while walking down a busy city street next to a construction site. My coworkers thought I was sitting in a quiet office. Sony’s dual-input system aggressively extracts your voice and deletes the chaos around you.
Test 4: Controls & The “Wide Area Tap” Myth
The Claim: Physical tap controls with specialized listening modes.
The Reality: You have to tap the actual earbud, not your face.
If you owned the older Sony LinkBuds, you might remember “Wide Area Tap,” where you could tap your cheek to pause your music. The Sony LinkBuds Clip does NOT have Wide Area Tap. You must tap the back module of the hardware itself.
- The Sony Smart Modes: A double-tap on the left Sony earbud cycles through modes. The coolest one? Sound Leakage Reduction. Because open-ear buds leak sound to people sitting next to you, this Sony mode uses phase-cancellation to muffle the audio escaping the bud. It is perfect for private calls in a quiet office.
Test 5: Battery & Missing Premium Features
The Claim: 9 hours of battery (37 hours with the case).
The Reality: Closer to 7 hours, with a glaring omission.
- Battery Life: In my standardized tests at medium volume, the Sony LinkBuds Clip lasted 7 hours and 10 minutes. That is plenty for a workday, and a quick 3-minute charge in the case buys you another hour.
- The Missing Tech: For $229.99 USD, the Sony charging case does not have wireless charging. Furthermore, Sony left out high-res codecs like LDAC, opting only for standard SBC/AAC. (Though, to be fair, you wouldn’t be able to hear high-res audio over ambient street noise anyway).
- Multipoint: Thankfully, Sony included Bluetooth Multipoint. You can seamlessly connect to your Windows laptop and your iPhone at the same time.
Comparison: The Open-Ear Showdown
Sony vs. Bose: The Bose Ultra Open costs $70 more and grips your ear tighter, making it better for extreme sports but worse for 8-hour office comfort. Sony wins massively on call quality and price.
Sony vs. Shokz: Shokz uses a hook design that provides better bass, but Sony’s sleek, jewelry-like aesthetic and superior AI microphones make the Sony LinkBuds Clip the better choice for white-collar professionals.
The Verdict: The Hybrid Worker’s Dream
The Sony LinkBuds Clip is not for audiophiles who want to sit in a dark room and analyze a bass guitar.
It is an incredibly specialized tool built for the modern multi-tasker. If you work in a hybrid office, walk busy streets, or hate the feeling of silicone jammed in your ear canals, Sony has built a masterpiece. The microphones alone are worth the price of admission.
Pros:
- Sony AI Mics: Unrivaled call clarity in loud environments.
- Supreme Comfort: Pain-free, “always-on” wearability.
- Awareness: Hear your coworkers and traffic perfectly.
- Leakage Reduction: Sony’s privacy mode actually works.
Cons:
- Weak Bass: Physics prevents deep low-end.
- No Wireless Charging: A tough pill to swallow at $230.
- Tap Controls: Takes practice to get the tap force right.
Disclaimer: I wore the Sony LinkBuds Clip to a family dinner and forgot to pause my podcast. I nodded along to a true-crime documentary while my aunt talked about her garden. Sony makes it too easy to multitask.








