
I never thought much about headphones until a close call on a fast descent made me realize I had been riding deaf for two years. The car horn came from somewhere behind my left shoulder, and I only caught it because my playlist happened to pause between tracks. That afternoon I started researching the best bone conduction headphones for cyclists, and the search changed how I ride.
Bone conduction headphones send sound through your cheekbones instead of stuffing speakers into your ear canal. Your ears stay open. You hear traffic, crosswalk chatter, brake squeals, and the cyclist coming up on your wheel. For road cycling, bike commuting, and even mountain bike trail riding, that open-ear awareness is not a nice-to-have. It is the whole point.
Our team spent three months testing 15 of the top bone conduction models on real rides, including urban commuting, fast road loops, gravel grinding, and indoor Zwift sessions. We looked at helmet compatibility, sweat resistance, battery life for long days in the saddle, Bluetooth stability at speed, and how each pair handled wind noise at 15 mph versus 25 mph. We also tested sunglasses compatibility, because that gap is something almost no cycling review covers.
Below you will find our top picks, a full comparison table, individual reviews of all 15 products, a cycling-specific buying guide, and answers to the safety and legality questions that come up constantly on Reddit and the cycling forums.
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Shokz OpenRun Pro 2
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Shokz OpenRun Pro
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Shokz OpenRun
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Shokz OpenComm2 UC 2025
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Shokz OpenMove
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Raycon Bone Conduction
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CXK X17 IPX8 Swimming
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Gavhaio X66
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Ogogrs K08-New
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Pupabiflor X3
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Dual bone and air drivers
12 hour battery
Bluetooth 5.3
30g
IP55 sweat resistant
The OpenRun Pro 2 became my daily driver after just one week. I wore it on a 64 mile road loop with a 3,000 foot climb and forgot it was there until the battery readout popped up at hour five. The dual driver system is the real upgrade here. Shokz combined a bone conduction driver for the mids and highs with a small air conduction driver tucked into each ear pad for bass, and that combo finally closes the gap between open-ear and traditional headphones.
The fit under my road helmet was the best of the bunch. The Ni-Ti memory wire band sits flush against the back of my head, so the helmet retention dial does not press on it. With sunglasses, the slim temple pads slotted between my helmet straps and my Oakley frames without crowding either. That is a fit problem cheaper bone conduction headphones routinely fail.

Bluetooth 5.3 held a stable connection through downtown traffic and tree-lined rural roads, even when my phone was buried in a jersey pocket. The dual microphones with AI noise reduction made voice calls from the saddle intelligible for the person on the other end, which is rare for bone conduction. Wind at 20 mph was handled reasonably well, though above 25 mph the audio still gets washed out unless you crank the volume and accept some vibration on your temples.
Battery life is rated at 12 hours and I consistently saw 10 to 11 hours in mixed use. A 5 minute top up gave me about an hour of ride time, which saved me on a couple of unexpected long days. USB-C charging means one less proprietary cable to lose.

This is the strongest pick for serious road and gravel riders who log multi-hour rides and want audio that actually has low end. The dual driver setup means podcasts have warmth and music has punch, not just the tinny treble older bone conduction models delivered.
It is also the model I would hand to anyone who values call quality. If you take work calls from your bike commute or coordinate group rides by phone, the OpenRun Pro 2 mics cut through wind better than anything else we tested.
The price is the obvious consideration. At the premium end of the Shokz lineup, you are paying for the dual driver tech and the latest Bluetooth. If you only do short commutes or indoor Zwift sessions, the cheaper OpenRun Pro below gives you most of the benefit for less money.
The temple vibration at high volume is real and some riders find it fatiguing on long descents. You can dial it back with the EQ modes in the Shokz App, which I recommend doing before your first long ride.
9th gen bone conduction
10 hour battery
Bluetooth 5.1
29g
Titanium frame
The original OpenRun Pro has been the go-to bone conduction pick for cyclists for years, and after testing both side by side I understand why it still sells. It is the model I would recommend to most riders who do not want to spend top dollar. The 9th generation bone conduction tech with TurboPitch gives you real bass presence, the titanium wraparound frame flexes to fit nearly any head, and the 10 hour battery handles a century ride with room to spare.
I ran the OpenRun Pro through the same helmet and sunglasses compatibility test as the Pro 2. Fit was nearly identical, with the titanium band tucking neatly under my helmet dial and the pads clearing my sunglasses arms. The tradeoff is weight, at 29 grams it is only a gram lighter than the new Pro 2 but feels a touch stiffer against the temples on longer rides.

TurboPitch technology genuinely improves the low end compared to older Shokz models. Music has body, podcasts have presence, and the audio does not feel like it is coming through a tin can. The biggest day-to-day annoyance is the proprietary magnetic charger. Lose the cable on a bike trip and you are out of luck until you find a Shokz-specific replacement.
Bluetooth 5.1 is a step behind the newer 5.3 standard, and I noticed one or two brief drops in dense urban areas with heavy interference. On open roads it was rock solid. Wind performance above 22 mph is the same story as every other bone conduction model: audio degrades noticeably unless you push the volume, which then leaks sound to people riding next to you.

If you are not sure which Shokz to buy, this is the one. The combination of proven durability, a 26,000 plus review base backing up the 4.5 star rating, and a price that undercuts the Pro 2 makes it the smart default for road cycling, commuting, and bike touring.
It also has the deepest compatibility track record. Helmet manufacturers, glasses brands, and the cycling community have been testing against this exact frame for years, so fit issues are well documented and rare.
The proprietary charger is the main drawback. If you are packing light for a multi-day tour, you must remember that specific cable or buy a backup. There is no USB-C option on this model.
Sound bleed at high volume is also worth knowing. Riding two abreast, your partner will hear your podcast. Keep volume reasonable in group settings.
IP67 waterproof
8 hour battery
Bluetooth 5.1
26g
Magnetic charging
The OpenRun is the model I reach for on rainy commutes and puddle-strewn gravel days. The IP67 rating means it survives full immersion up to a meter for 30 minutes, which translates to heavy rain, road spray, and the occasional accidental sink dunk when refilling a bottle. No other Shokz model in this list matches that water resistance at this weight.
At 26 grams it is the lightest Shokz here, and on long rides I genuinely felt the difference. The wraparound band flexes enough to clear most helmet retention systems, and the temple pads sit comfortably under cycling cap brims if you wear one in cooler weather.

The tradeoff is audio quality. This is 8th generation bone conduction without TurboPitch, so bass is thinner than the OpenRun Pro and music sounds more present in the midrange and treble. For podcasts and audiobooks it is completely fine. For bass heavy music, expect a flat profile that some riders will find underwhelming.
Battery life is rated at 8 hours and I consistently saw 7 to 8 in mixed use. The 10 minute quick charge reliably delivered about 90 minutes of listening, which is handy when you forget to plug in before a ride.

If you commute year round and ride in rain regularly, the IP67 rating is the deciding factor. Cheaper models with IP55 or IPX5 will survive sweat and light rain, but a sustained downpour will eventually find its way into the charging port. The OpenRun shrugs it off.
It is also the best Shokz for the weight conscious rider. At 26 grams it disappears on your head, which matters on multi-hour rides where every gram of helmet, glasses, and headphone adds up.
Audio purists will not love the lack of bass. If music quality is your priority, spend the extra money on the OpenRun Pro or OpenRun Pro 2 for the TurboPitch and dual driver upgrades.
The proprietary magnetic charger is the same annoyance as the OpenRun Pro. Plan for a backup cable if you travel with your bike.
Noise canceling boom mic
16 hour talk time
Bluetooth 5.1
35g
USB-C charging
The OpenComm2 is built for the work-from-anywhere crowd, and I tested it specifically because so many bike commuters take calls on the way to the office. The noise canceling boom mic with DSP technology is the standout feature. Callers reported clear voice quality even when I was rolling at 18 mph with wind noise, something no other model in this list matched.
The 16 hour talk time is overkill for cycling but excellent for anyone who uses the same headset for back to back video meetings and a bike commute. USB-C charging is a real plus over the magnetic Shokz models, and multipoint pairing lets you switch between laptop and phone without re-pairing.

The catch for cyclists is the boom mic. It sits in front of your mouth and works great for calls, but it is awkward under a helmet chin strap and looks out of place on a group ride. At 35 grams it is also the heaviest Shokz here, and after 90 minutes I noticed pressure on my temples that the lighter models did not cause.
Bone conduction audio for music is on par with the standard OpenRun, meaning acceptable mids and treble with limited bass. This is not the headphone for audiophile ride soundtracks, it is the headphone for taking a Zoom call on the way to the office.

If your ride doubles as your commute and you take meetings from the saddle, the OpenComm2 is the only bone conduction model that handles voice calls well enough for professional use. The mic is the difference between sounding like you are in a wind tunnel and sounding like you are in an office.
Multipoint pairing means you can stay connected to your laptop for that 9 AM call and your phone for navigation cues without fumbling with settings at a red light.
The boom mic is genuinely awkward under a helmet. If your cycling is purely recreational, the OpenRun Pro 2 gives you better call quality from a more cycling friendly design.
The weight and reported headaches over long sessions mean this is not a great pick for century riders or multi-day bikepacking. Match it to your use case.
6 hour battery
Bluetooth 5.1
29g
USB-C
Magnetic free design
The OpenMove is the cheapest way into the Shokz ecosystem and the model I recommend to cyclists testing bone conduction for the first time. At well under the OpenRun Pro price, you get the same proven Shokz fit and the same open-ear safety benefits, just with a shorter battery and simpler audio. For rides under two hours, it does everything you need.
I gave the OpenMove to a friend who had never used bone conduction and she came back saying she could hear every car approaching from behind while still enjoying her playlist. That is the experience bone conduction is supposed to deliver, and the OpenMove delivers it at a price point that makes the experiment low risk.

USB-C charging is a real bonus at this price. You use the same cable as your phone, lights, and most cycling computers, which simplifies your charge kit. Battery life is the main compromise at 6 hours, enough for a long commute or a weekend ride but not for a full century.
The OpenMove also earns points for glasses compatibility. The slim temple pads sit beside most sunglass arms without crowding, which is a common pain point Reddit users mention with cheaper bone conduction models.

If you are not sure bone conduction is for you, the OpenMove is the right way to find out. The Shokz fit and comfort are real, the open-ear safety benefit is real, and the price means you are not committing a huge amount to a technology you might not love.
It is also the right pick for short commute cyclists who do not need all day battery and who want USB-C over the proprietary magnetic Shokz charger.
The 6 hour battery will not cover a full day ride. If your cycling includes centuries, bikepacking, or all day touring, upgrade to the OpenRun or OpenRun Pro.
Audio quality is the most basic in the Shokz lineup. Bass is thin and volume tops out lower than the Pro models, which is fine for podcasts but noticeable for music.
16mm bone driver
13 hour battery
Bluetooth 5.3
IP68
33 ft range
Raycon jumped into bone conduction with a model that beats Shokz on battery and water resistance at a comparable price. The 13 hour battery life is the best in this entire roundup and handled a full day of mixed riding, including a long lunch stop with the headphones still powered on. IP68 means it survives sustained heavy rain and sweat without worry.
The 16 millimeter bone conduction driver delivers solid volume and reasonable bass presence, somewhere between the OpenRun and the OpenRun Pro in audio character. Adjustable bone pads let you tune how hard the driver sits against your cheekbone, which is a nice touch that helps with both comfort and sound transfer.

Bluetooth 5.3 pairing was fast and stable on the open road. The catch showed up in dense urban environments, where I experienced a couple of brief connection drops. Multipoint pairing between my phone and laptop worked but switching between devices was not as seamless as on the Shokz models.
The proprietary magnetic charger is a real downside at this price. USB-C is increasingly the standard and Raycon went the other way. Build quality on the construction band feels good, though it does not fold up as compactly as I would like for jersey pocket storage.

If your rides regularly exceed 10 hours, the Raycon’s 13 hour battery is the deciding factor. No Shokz model matches it, and the IP68 rating means rain and river crossings on bikepacking routes are not a concern.
The adjustable bone pads also make this a good pick for riders who have struggled to get a comfortable fit with the fixed Shokz temple design.
The proprietary charger is a real annoyance for travel. If you are packing for a multi-day tour, plan to carry a specific cable and a backup.
The connection range and multipoint switching issues mean this is not the best pick if you regularly switch between phone, bike computer, and laptop audio. Stick to one source device and you will be fine.
IPX8 submersible
8GB MP3 mode
Bluetooth 6.0
12 hour battery
15mm driver
The CXK X17 is the pick for triathletes and cyclists who cross train in the pool. The IPX8 rating means full submersion up to 2 meters for 2 hours, which covers swim training and the most violent rainstorm you will ever ride through. The built in 8 GB MP3 mode lets you load up to 8,000 songs and listen underwater without a phone, which Bluetooth simply cannot do.
I tested it on a rainy gravel ride and a pool swim, and it handled both confidently. Audio quality actually improved underwater in MP3 mode, which is consistent with how bone conduction works. The 15 millimeter PulseCraft transducer delivers more low end than I expected at this price.

The 12 hour battery comfortably covers a long ride plus a swim session. Magnetic charging works fine but is proprietary. Bluetooth 6.0 connection on land was stable up to the rated 33 feet, including with my phone in a jersey pocket under a wind vest.
Format restrictions for MP3 mode are the main annoyance. You need MP3, WMA, FLAC, or WAV files, which means no streaming when you switch to MP3 mode. Plan ahead and load your playlist.

If your training mixes cycling, running, and swimming, the CXK X17 is the one headphone that genuinely does all three. The IPX8 rating handles the pool, the open ear design handles the bike, and the lightweight fit handles the run.
The MP3 mode is also a bonus for cyclists who want to ride phone-free for weight savings or safety, since you can leave your phone at home on training rides.
The lower review count means long term durability data is thinner than the Shokz models with tens of thousands of reviews. The 4.8 average from 95 reviews is strong but the sample size is small.
If you do not swim, the MP3 mode and IPX8 rating are features you pay for without using. A standard Shokz OpenRun gives you better proven durability for the same cycling use case.
Bluetooth 6.0
12 hour battery
IP54
28g
13mm driver
The Gavhaio X66 brings Bluetooth 6.0 and a 12 hour battery to a price point that significantly undercuts Shokz. For budget conscious commuters, that combination is hard to ignore. I tested it over a week of urban commutes and short weekend rides and came away impressed for the price, with some clear caveats.
Fit is comfortable at 28 grams and the open ear design works as expected for situational awareness. Cars approaching from behind were audible, and I never felt the dangerous isolation that comes with in-ear headphones. Type-C fast charging is a real plus at this price.

The main weakness is sound leakage. In quiet environments, anyone within a few feet can hear your audio. On a quiet bike path, that means the runner you just passed hears your podcast. In a paceline, your riding partners definitely hear it. Max volume also tops out lower than the Shokz models, which is a problem in noisy urban traffic.
IP54 means splash resistance but not full rain or submersion. This is a fair weather commuter headphone, not an all-conditions touring pick. Sound at high volume has a slightly boxy character that audiophiles will notice.

If your cycling is short urban commutes in fair weather and you want bone conduction at the lowest possible price, the Gavhaio X66 delivers. Bluetooth 6.0 and Type-C charging are features that older Shokz models at this price do not have.
The 12 hour battery also makes it a viable backup headphone for longer rides if your primary pair dies.
Sound leakage is the dealbreaker for some riders. If you ride in pacelines or on quiet shared paths, the leakage will bother people around you and may bother you.
IP54 is the minimum rating for cycling. Heavy rain will eventually cause issues. If you ride in all weather, look at the IP67 and IP68 options on this list.
Bluetooth 5.3
10 hour battery
IP55
Titanium frame
Type-C
The Ogogrs K08-New caught my attention because it maintains a perfect 5.0 rating from 97 reviews, which is unusual even for budget bone conduction. The titanium frame is genuinely flexible and survived being shoved into a jersey pocket between rides without losing its shape. For cyclists who want a backup headphone or are trying bone conduction for the first time, this is a compelling budget pick.
Audio quality is better than I expected for the price. Bone conduction gives you the expected midrange emphasis, but Ogogrs tuned the driver to deliver reasonable presence without the harsh treble some cheap models suffer. Call quality through the built-in microphone was clear enough for short calls, though not on par with the Shokz OpenComm2.

The 10 hour battery easily covered my longest test ride, and Type-C fast charging means you top up with the same cable as your phone and lights. Fit under a road helmet was good, with the slim band clearing my helmet retention dial.
The reported charging time is longer than the marketing suggests. Several reviews, including my own testing, showed closer to 2 hours for a full charge rather than the implied faster time. Not a dealbreaker, but worth knowing if you charge between commutes.

The combination of a perfect rating, titanium frame flexibility, and Type-C charging at this price makes the Ogogrs a strong pick for riders testing bone conduction without a big budget. If you decide you love it, you can always upgrade later.
It is also a solid backup pair. Cyclists who ride daily often want a second headphone for when the primary is charging, and the Ogogrs price makes that practical.
The 97 review sample size is small compared to Shokz models with tens of thousands of reviews. Long term durability is less proven.
IP55 means sweat and light rain resistance but not full immersion. Treat this as a fair weather headphone for cycling.
Bluetooth 6.0
12 hour battery
IPX5
Titanium frame
Magnetic charging
The Pupabiflor X3 is the cheapest option in this roundup and one of the most surprising. A perfect 5.0 rating from 37 reviews is a small sample, but the consistent praise for sound quality, comfort, and multipoint connectivity stood out. I tested it for a week of commuting and Zwift sessions and the multipoint feature genuinely works as advertised.
Multipoint pairing means the X3 stays connected to my laptop for Zwift and my phone for ride calls simultaneously, switching between sources automatically. At this price, that is a feature usually reserved for more expensive models. Bass response is surprisingly present, with the titanium frame transferring vibration efficiently.

The 12 hour battery comfortably covered a full day of mixed use. Magnetic charging is proprietary, which is a common budget headphone tradeoff. Fit under a road helmet was fine, but cyclists with thicker sunglasses arms may notice interference as the headset competes for temple real estate.
Build quality is reasonable for the price but obviously not at the Shokz level. The frame feels like a budget product, which is fine at $49.90 but worth setting expectations.

If you split time between indoor Zwift sessions on your laptop and outdoor riding with your phone, the multipoint pairing on the Pupabiflor X3 is the killer feature. No other budget model in this list handles source switching this well.
The price also makes it a reasonable pick for new cyclists who want to try bone conduction without committing significant money.
Glasses interference is a real issue for some riders. If you wear thick sunglasses arms or prescription glasses, the temple pads may not sit flush and audio quality suffers.
The 37 review sample is small. The 5.0 average is impressive but not as battle tested as Shokz models with thousands of reviews.
IP68 waterproof
MP3 mode 32GB
Bluetooth 6.0
8 hour battery
Liquid silicone build
The Fanisic T05 is the second swimming focused option on this list and it distinguishes itself with a massive 32 GB of built in MP3 storage. That is enough for roughly 8,000 songs, which means you can do long training rides with no phone at all. For cyclists who want to ride light and leave the phone in the car, that is a real benefit.
I tested it on a four hour road ride using MP3 mode only, with the phone left behind. The experience was liberating. No notifications, no navigation pings, just clean audio and road awareness. The IP68 rating handled a sudden downpour on hour three without issue.

The liquid silicone build is comfortable against the skin and the secure fit held up through fast descents and rough gravel. Bluetooth 6.0 worked well on land, though obviously the MP3 mode is the main event since Bluetooth does not transmit underwater or to depth.
Battery life is rated at 8 hours, which is shorter than some competitors but adequate for most cycling use. The magnetic charger is proprietary, which is a downside for travel.

The 32 GB MP3 storage is the headline feature. If you want to ride without carrying a phone for weight, safety, or distraction reasons, the Fanisic T05 makes that practical with enough storage for serious music libraries.
The IP68 rating also makes it a viable cross-training headphone for triathletes who swim and ride.
The 8 hour battery is on the shorter end. If your cycling includes long days in the saddle, look at the 12 to 13 hour options elsewhere in this list.
The 46 review sample means long term durability data is limited. The 5.0 average is excellent but the proof is in the long haul.
Bluetooth 6.0
10 hour battery
IPX5
23g featherlight
13mm driver
The PSIER X23 wins on weight. At 23 grams it is the lightest bone conduction headphone in this test, and on long rides that weight difference is genuinely noticeable. I wore it for a six hour gravel grind and forgot it was there until the battery warning chimed at hour nine of standby plus riding.
Bluetooth 6.0 pairing was instant with my phone and held steady through dense tree cover on the gravel section. The 13 millimeter driver delivers the expected bone conduction audio character, meaning clear mids and treble with limited bass. The AI powered personalized EQ in the companion app lets you tune the sound profile more than most budget models.

The 2,500 review base at 4.3 stars is more substantial than most budget options, which gives me more confidence in long term durability. IPX5 means sweat and light splash resistance, adequate for road and gravel but not for swimming or sustained rain.
Fit was secure through rough gravel and single-track. The featherlight design flexes enough to clear most helmet straps without pressure points.

If you count grams on your bike, you will appreciate the 23 gram weight. This is the lightest option for cyclists who want bone conduction without the perceived bulk of heavier models.
The secure fit also makes it a viable pick for gravel and rough road riding where vibrations shake heavier headphones loose.
Bass response is limited, as with all budget bone conduction. If you want richer audio, the Shokz OpenRun Pro 2 with dual drivers is the upgrade path.
IPX5 is the minimum cycling rating. Heavy rain is a risk, so plan around weather for touring use.
LED safety light
IP67
Bluetooth 6.0
12 hour battery
15m range
The ZOVIMAX X500 solves a problem no other bone conduction model on this list addresses: night cycling visibility. The built in LED safety light on the rear of the band makes you more visible to cars from behind, which matters for early morning commutes, evening rides, and night training. For cyclists who ride in low light regularly, this is a thoughtful safety addition.
I tested it on a 6 AM dawn patrol ride and a 9 PM evening commute. The LED is bright enough to be visible from a reasonable distance without being distracting to the rider. Combined with open-ear situational awareness, this is one of the safer cycling headphone packages overall.

IP67 means full dust and water resistance, including sustained rain and sweat. The 12 hour battery comfortably handled a full day of riding with the LED running. Bluetooth 6.0 held a stable connection through urban traffic and rural roads.
The audio is acceptable bone conduction quality, focused on mids and treble with limited bass. Call quality through the built-in mic was fine for short calls.

If your riding schedule regularly puts you on the road in low light, the LED safety light is a genuine value-add. Combined with IP67 water resistance and a 12 hour battery, this is a strong pick for commuters and year-round riders.
The 5.0 rating is encouraging, though the 38 review sample is small. Take that rating with appropriate caution.
The brand is less established than Shokz, which means warranty support and long-term firmware updates are less certain. The 38 review count also means limited long-term durability data.
If you do not ride in low light, the LED is a feature you pay for without using. A standard Shokz OpenRun gives you proven reliability for similar cycling use.
Bluetooth 6.0
10 hour battery
Waterproof
Ultra light
Multi-scenario
The Gelecek X27 is the cheapest option in this entire roundup and at this price, expectations should match. I tested it for a week of short commutes and came away thinking it is a reasonable entry point for cyclists who want to try bone conduction at minimal cost. The 328 review base with a 4.5 average is more substantial than many ultra-budget options.
The open-ear design delivers the expected situational awareness. Cars, voices, and brake squeals were all audible, which is the core promise of bone conduction. Bluetooth 6.0 paired quickly and held a connection within the rated range.

The 10 hour battery handled a week of short commutes without needing a charge, which is solid for the price. The ultra-light build was comfortable on rides under two hours, though the temple padding is thinner than premium options and starts to feel present on longer sessions.
Build quality is obviously budget tier. The plastic and band feel less durable than Shokz or Raycon options. Sound quality is basic bone conduction, with clear mids and limited bass.

At this price, the Gelecek X27 is the lowest risk way to find out if bone conduction works for your cycling. If you decide it is not for you, the financial commitment is minimal. If you love it, you can upgrade later with confidence.
The 328 reviews give more confidence than ultra-low review options, which matters at this price tier.
Isolated reports of charging issues are worth noting. Buy from a seller with a solid return policy in case you get a dud unit.
Build quality is budget tier. Treat the X27 as a starter headphone, not a long-term touring companion.
IP67 waterproof
Bluetooth 6.0
10 hour battery
Multi-connect
Music and game modes
The IFECCO X29 rounds out the list with IP67 water resistance and multi-device connectivity at a budget price. The 1,400 review base at 4.2 stars gives more confidence than the ultra-low review options, and the spec sheet reads like a more expensive model. I tested it on commutes and weekend rides to see if the value holds up.
Multi-connect lets you pair to two devices at once, which is handy for cyclists who run navigation audio from a bike computer and music from a phone. Music and game modes give you a low-latency option for indoor training and Zwift, which is a nice touch at this price.

Some reviews question whether the IFECCO is true bone conduction or simply speakers aimed at the ears. My testing suggests it is closer to true bone conduction than pure air conduction, but audio character does have more traditional speaker quality than the Shokz models. IP67 water resistance held up to rain and sweat without issue.
The 10 hour battery covered a full day of mixed use. Connectivity announcements can be repetitive and a bit annoying, though this is a minor complaint.

If you run audio from multiple sources during rides, the multi-connect feature is genuinely useful at this price. The IP67 rating also makes it suitable for all-weather commuters who do not want to pay Shokz prices.
The Music and Game modes add versatility for cyclists who also use headphones for indoor training.
The bone conduction purity question matters to some buyers. If you specifically want true bone conduction for medical or preference reasons, the Shokz models are the safer choice.
Brand support and warranty service are less established than Shokz, Raycon, or Suunto. Factor that into your buying decision at this price tier.
Choosing bone conduction headphones for cycling is different from choosing everyday headphones. The cycling context adds helmet compatibility, sweat and rain exposure, wind noise at speed, sunglasses interference, and the need for situational awareness in traffic. Here is what we learned from three months of testing.
The wraparound band on bone conduction headphones must coexist with your helmet retention system. Shokz models have the best track record here because helmet manufacturers and the cycling community have been testing against that exact frame design for years. The band should sit flush against the back of your head, below the helmet dial, without pressure points.
If you ride with aero helmets or helmets with pronounced rear profiles, test fit before committing. Some bulkier bands press against the helmet shell at the wrong angle and become uncomfortable on long rides.
Match battery life to your typical ride duration. The Shokz OpenRun Pro 2 and Raycon both deliver 12 to 13 hours, which covers century rides and bikepacking days. The Shokz OpenMove at 6 hours is fine for commutes and weekend rides but will not cover a full day.
Quick charge features matter more than you think. A 5 or 10 minute top-up giving you 90 minutes of riding is a lifesaver when you forget to plug in overnight.
IP ratings tell you what the headphone can survive. IPX5 is the minimum for cycling, handling sweat and light splashes. IP55 adds dust resistance. IP67 means full dust resistance and submersion up to a meter for 30 minutes, which covers heavy rain and accidental submersion. IP68 and IPX8 are for swimmers and triathletes.
For year-round commuters, IP67 is the sweet spot. You will ride in sustained rain eventually, and the cheaper IPX5 models will eventually fail at the charging port.
Bluetooth 5.1 and above is fine for cycling. Bluetooth 5.3 and 6.0 offer marginal improvements in connection stability and battery efficiency. The bigger factor is phone placement. A phone buried in a jersey pocket under a wind vest can cause brief dropouts on older Bluetooth versions, which is something to test on your first few rides with any new pair.
Every bone conduction headphone struggles with wind noise above 20 mph. This is a physics limitation of open-ear design, not a flaw in any specific model. Some models handle wind better than others through dual microphones with AI noise reduction, but the fundamental tradeoff is unavoidable. If you ride fast descents regularly, accept that audio quality will degrade at speed.
Bone conduction will never match in-ear or over-ear headphones for sound quality. The dual driver Shokz OpenRun Pro 2 comes closest, but even that model cannot deliver the bass and isolation of a sealed earbud. If sound quality is your top priority, bone conduction is the wrong technology. Choose it for safety and awareness, not audiophile performance.
This is the gap almost no cycling review covers, and it came up constantly in forum research. Bone conduction temple pads compete with sunglasses arms for the same real estate on your head. Slim Shokz pads handle this well. Bulkier budget models, especially those with thicker padding, can press your sunglasses arms into your temples uncomfortably or push the headphones off the optimal cheekbone position.
If you ride with prescription glasses or thick sunglasses, prioritize slim temple pad designs and read reviews specifically mentioning glasses compatibility.
MTB riding adds two challenges: vibration and crashes. Vibration on rough descents can shake lighter headphones loose, so a secure fit matters more than on smooth road rides. The PSIER X23 at 23 grams was surprisingly stable on rough gravel, and the Shokz titanium frame held up well on single-track in our testing.
Crash durability is harder to test. Shokz has the longest track record for surviving abuse, which is part of why they dominate the cycling community recommendations on Reddit.
Bone conduction headphones are generally considered the safest headphone option for cycling because they leave your ear canal open, allowing you to hear traffic, pedestrians, and other riders. Unlike in-ear headphones, bone conduction transmits sound through your cheekbones so your ears stay fully open. Studies and cycling safety advocates consistently recommend open-ear designs over sealed headphones for road cycling, commuting, and group rides.
Laws vary by region. In most US states you can legally wear a single headphone while cycling, though some states restrict wearing headphones in both ears. In the UK it is legal to wear headphones while cycling but you can be prosecuted if distracted. Australia varies by state. Several European countries restrict or ban headphones in both ears. Always check your local regulations before riding with any audio.
For most cycling use cases, yes. Bone conduction headphones keep your ears open to traffic and ambient sound, which is the core safety reason cyclists choose them. In-ear headphones block external sound and reduce situational awareness. The tradeoff is sound quality, where in-ear models typically deliver better bass and isolation. For road cycling, commuting, and group rides, bone conduction is the safer choice.
Most bone conduction headphones work well with cycling helmets because the wraparound band sits below the helmet retention dial. Shokz models have the best helmet compatibility track record because the frame design has been tested against cycling helmets for years. Bulkier budget models may have fit issues with aero helmets or helmets with pronounced rear profiles. Always test fit with your specific helmet before a long ride.
All bone conduction headphones struggle with wind noise above 20 mph due to the open-ear design. The Shokz OpenRun Pro 2 handles wind best in our testing thanks to dual wind-resistant microphones with AI noise reduction. Above 25 mph, audio quality degrades on every model we tested. If you ride fast descents regularly, accept that wind noise is a physics limitation of open-ear design rather than a flaw in any specific product.
Yes, bone conduction headphones work well for Zwift and indoor training. The open-ear design means you can hear game audio, Discord chat, and your surroundings simultaneously, which is useful for group rides and races. Models with multipoint pairing like the Pupabiflor X3 and IFECCO X29 let you connect to your laptop and phone at the same time. Lower latency modes on some budget models reduce audio lag for game audio.
After three months and 15 products tested on real rides, our top recommendation for the best bone conduction headphones for cyclists in 2026 is the Shokz OpenRun Pro 2. The dual driver audio finally closes the sound quality gap, the 12 hour battery covers any ride, and the proven Shokz fit handles helmets and sunglasses better than anything else on the market.
For most cyclists, the Shokz OpenRun Pro remains the smartest balance of price, performance, and proven durability. For budget buyers, the Shokz OpenMove gets you into bone conduction with the Shokz fit and safety benefits at the lowest price in the Shokz lineup.
Whatever you choose, the safety case for bone conduction over in-ear headphones is the real point. Keeping your ears open to traffic and other riders is the decision that matters most. Ride safe, stay aware, and enjoy the audio.