I Cheated on My $400 Headphones with a $100 Pair (And I Don’t Regret It): Baseus Inspire XH1 Review

Rating: ⭐⭐⭐⭐½ (4.5/5)

Price: ~$100 – $149 USD

Let’s be honest: explaining to your significant other why you need another pair of $400 noise-canceling headphones is a negotiation tactic reserved for FBI hostage specialists. We’ve been trained to believe that if you want “Good Sound” (capital G, capital S), you have to tithe a significant portion of your paycheck to the Holy Trinity of Audio: Sony, Bose, or Sennheiser.

But late in 2025, a disruptor charged into the room. Baseus, the company you probably know for making that 10-foot charging cable you bought at a gas station or the power bank currently saving your phone’s life, decided to make premium headphones.

And they didn’t just make them; they partnered with Bose to tune them.

I spent two weeks putting the Baseus Inspire XH1 through a gauntlet of tests—from noisy commutes to dead-silent rooms—to see if the “Sound by Bose” logo is a gimmick or a revolution. Here is the honest, data-backed, and slightly caffeinated review.

Test 1: Sound Quality (The “Bose” Factor)

The Claim: “Acoustic tuning by Bose” with 35mm precision-angled drivers.

The Reality: They sound suspiciously expensive.

Most budget headphones slap a 40mm driver flat against the side of your head and call it a day. The XH1 uses 35mm drivers angled to sit parallel to your ear canal.

Caveat: The Spatial Audio feature is great for movies, giving you that “cinema” feel, but for music? Turn it off. It makes your favorite band sound like they are playing inside a tiled bathroom.

Test 2: Connectivity & Features

The Claim: Bluetooth 6.1 and Ultra-Low Latency.

The Reality: These headphones are living in 2030.

My phone uses Bluetooth 5.3. My laptop uses 5.2. The XH1 rocks Bluetooth 6.1.

Test 3: Battery Life (The Endurance Run)

The Claim: 100 Hours (ANC Off) / 65 Hours (ANC On).

The Reality: I actually lost my charging cable.

Read that again. The Bose QC Ultra lasts 24 hours. The Sony WH-1000XM5 gets you 30.

The Baseus Inspire XH1 lasts so long that “Battery Anxiety” is cured. I flew from New York to London, forgot to turn them off, flew back, and used them for a week of commuting. They were still at 40%.

Test 4: Comfort & Build

The Claim: “CloudComfort” Ergonomics.

The Reality: A premium hug for your head.

Baseus calls their ear cushions “CloudComfort.” Cheesy name? Yes. Accurate? Also yes.

Test 5: ANC & Microphone Quality

The Claim: -48dB Noise Cancellation & 5-Mic AI ENC.

The Reality: Great for planes, okay for coffee shops.

Comparison: David vs. The Goliaths

FeatureBaseus Inspire XH1Anker Soundcore Space OneSony WH-CH720NBose QC Ultra
Price~$100 – $149~$99~$150~$429
Battery (ANC On)65 Hours40 Hours35 Hours24 Hours
Bluetoothv6.1v5.3v5.2v5.3
CodecsLDAC, AACLDACAAC, SBCaptX
FoldableYesYesNoYes
Vibe“Smart Buyer”“Bass Lover”“Brand Loyalist”“First Class”

Availability Note (Canada & Global)

If you’re in the US, these are easy to find on Amazon. For my Canadian friends, it’s a bit trickier—you might see them on third-party marketplaces or have to import them via AliExpress, where they compete in the $170-$200 CAD range. Even at that markup, they beat the local pricing for the Sony mid-rangers.

The Verdict: Are They Worth It?

If you travel often, hate charging things, and want high-fidelity sound without selling a kidney, the Baseus Inspire XH1 is the best value in audio right now.

They have effectively democratized premium audio. You get the Bose sound signature, future-proof Bluetooth 6.1, and battery life that outlasts most marriages.

Pros:

Cons:

Disclaimer: No chargers were harmed in the making of this review, though I did lose one because I didn’t need it for three weeks.

Exit mobile version