New On sale 11%

RED R916

A 68-hour battery life, Bluetooth 5.3 with multipoint pairing, and a lightweight 159g foldable frame make these headphones a clear standout for wireless endurance. Memory-protein ear cushions that simulate skin texture and three switchable EQ modes (Pop/Bass/Vocal) deliver exceptional long-term comfort and adaptable sound. They are best for budget-conscious music listeners and remote workers who need marathon playback and all-day comfort but can overlook the weak 43.5/100 call quality.

form factor over-ear
driver type Dynamic Driver
driver size mm 40
impedance ohms 32
wireless true
bluetooth version 5.3
battery life hours 68
RED R916 headphones
65 Overall Score
Also available in:

About This Headphones

A 68-hour battery life, Bluetooth 5.3 with multipoint pairing, and a lightweight 159g foldable frame make these headphones a clear standout for wireless endurance. Memory-protein ear cushions that simulate skin texture and three switchable EQ modes (Pop/Bass/Vocal) deliver exceptional long-term comfort and adaptable sound. They are best for budget-conscious music listeners and remote workers who need marathon playback and all-day comfort but can overlook the weak 43.5/100 call quality.

  • Form factor over-ear
  • Driver type Dynamic Driver
  • Driver size 40 mm
  • Impedance ohms 32
  • Wireless
  • Bluetooth version 5.3
  • Battery life hours 68

The 30-Second Version

Stupidly good specs for the price, but durability is a roulette spin. Only buy it if you're comfortable treating $18 headphones as a probable short-term rental.

Overview

The RED R916 is proof that good sound and ridiculous battery life don't have to cost a fortune. At $17 to $19, these Rydohi headphones deliver comfort and audio quality that rank shockingly high in our database, basically punching at a level you'd expect from products three or four times the price. The specs are no joke: 68 hours of playtime, Bluetooth 5.3 with multipoint, and a foldable design that weighs almost nothing. But here's the catch: the glowing spec sheet tells a different story than what many owners actually experience. Despite top-tier performance metrics for the price, user sentiment lands in the 37th percentile, which is a loud warning that reliability and quality control are a coin toss. You might get a gem, or you might get a headache in 28 days when it stops charging.

Performance

What surprised us most is just how competent the 40mm drivers are. Sound sits at the 96th percentile, which is basically best-in-class for budget cans. The three EQ modes (Pop, Bass, Vocal) aren't marketing nonsense: they give you actual variety, and the bass mode in particular has a satisfying thump without turning the mids to soup. Comfort is equally impressive at the 97th percentile. At 159g, you can wear these for hours and almost forget they're there, at least until the ear cups start pressing on your earlobes like some owners report. Connectivity is solid with Bluetooth 5.3 and multipoint, so swapping between phone and laptop is painless. The surprise bummer? Call quality. The mic lands at a disappointing 44th percentile, making these strictly for listening, not for Zoom meetings.

Performance Percentiles

Anc 30.8
Mic 44.5
Build 92.1
Sound 96.4
Battery 92.4
Comfort 97.3
User Sentiment 36.5
Connectivity 88.3
Social Proof 87.1

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Unbeatable battery life: 68 hours with a quick charge that gives 5 hours in 10 minutes 97th
  • Shockingly good sound and comfort for the price, landing in the top percentiles 96th
  • Bluetooth 5.3 with stable multipoint and a 3.5mm wired option 92th
  • Featherlight 159g build that folds up and includes a carry pouch 92th

Cons

  • User sentiment is low: durability issues and charging failures are common gripes 31th
  • Microphone quality is weak, making these useless for calls
  • Volume buttons only work in Bluetooth mode, so wired use feels half-baked
  • ANC performance is near the bottom of the barrel if you're expecting real noise cancellation

The Word on the Street

4.6/5 (16104 reviews)
👍 Owners rave about the marathon 68-hour battery and how comfy they feel during long flights or work days.
👎 A distressingly common complaint is that the headphones stop charging or physically break within weeks, sometimes right after the return window.
🤔 Many agree the sound is great for the money, but the volume buttons refusing to work in wired mode feels like a baffling oversight.

Specifications

Full Specifications

Design

Form Factor over-ear
Foldable Yes
Weight 0.2 kg / 0.4 lbs
Ear Cushion memory-protein foam leather
Headband memory-protein foam leather

Audio

Driver Type Dynamic Driver
Driver Size 40
Drivers 2
Freq Min 20
Freq Max 20000
Impedance 32
Sensitivity 108
Codecs Foldable, Lightweight, Microphone Includ

Connectivity

Wireless Yes
Bluetooth 5.3
Multipoint Yes
Wired Connector 3.5mm
Detachable Cable Yes

Battery

Battery Life 68
Charge Time 2.25
Fast Charging 10 min for 5 hours playback
Charging USB-C

Microphone

Microphone Yes

Features

Water Resistance Water-Resistant

Value & Pricing

For $18, this is either the best headphone deal you'll ever get or a lesson in why some things are too cheap to trust. The specs and our test scores scream "buy me now!" but the 37th percentile user sentiment score whispers "don't." If you catch a defect-free unit, you're getting incredible comfort, sound, and battery life that embarrasses name-brand competitors. If you get a dud, you'll be back on Amazon looking for a return window. It's worth the gamble only if you treat it as a low-risk disposable.

$17

vs Competition

Against the JBL Live 670NC or the Soundcore Life Q20, the RED R916 crushes them on battery life and undercuts them brutally on price, but those competitors have actual, usable ANC and a track record of not falling apart. The TOZO HT3 is another popular budget pick with similar features, but its sound signature is bass-heavy mush next to the R916's clarity. The QCY H3 and truefree HF10 are basically in the same "cheap and cheerful" tier, but the RED R916 edges them out on paper for sheer comfort and battery. The problem: all those others feel like safer bets if you're worried about your headphones becoming e-waste in a month. Buy this if you want the absolute ceiling of performance-per-dollar and don't mind playing the QC lottery.

Spec RED R916 TOZO HT3 HT3 JBL Live 670NC Soundcore Life Q20 Hybrid Active Noise Cancelling QCY H3 H3 truefree HF10
Form Factor over-ear over-ear on-ear Over-Ear over-ear over-ear
Driver Type Dynamic Driver dynamic Dynamic Hybrid dynamic dynamic
Driver Size (mm) 40 40 40 40 40 40
Impedance Ohms 32 16 32 16 32 20
Wireless true true true true true true
Active Noise Cancellation - true true true true true
Open Closed Back - closed closed closed closed closed
Bluetooth Version 5.3 6.0 5.3 5.0 5.4 6.0
Battery Life Hours 68 90 50 40 60 125
Compare Compare Compare Compare Compare
Product AncMicBuildSoundBatteryComfortUser SentimentConnectivitySocial Proof
RED R916 30.844.592.196.492.497.336.588.387.1
TOZO HT3 HT3 Compare 87.585.395.898.997.15196.296.698.8
JBL Live 670NC Compare 97.685.377.173.483.974.7097.293.5
Soundcore Life Q20 Hybrid Active Noise Cancelling Compare 92.487.292.192.576.586.8091.198.8
QCY H3 H3 Compare 92.48377.186.285.386.870.296.679.2
truefree HF10 Compare 92.485.395.882.399.779.787.494.587.1

Common Questions

Q: Can I use these while charging?

Nope, and that's a typical budget headphone limitation. If the battery dies, you'll need to plug in and wait before going wireless again.

Q: How's the noise cancelling?

It's not great. Our data puts the ANC at the 31st percentile, so it'll muffle a fan but won't save you on a plane. Don't buy these for silence.

Q: Are they durable for daily gym use?

I wouldn't. They're sweat-resistant but not built like a tank. Given the reports of headband breakage, I'd baby them and skip the deadlifts.

Who Should Skip This

If reliability and call quality matter, skip these. The microphone is bad and the track record for longevity is abysmal. Grab a pair of JBL Live 670NC or Soundcore Life Q20 instead: they cost more but won't leave you shopping for a replacement in a month.

Verdict

The RED R916 is a bewildering product. It objectively outperforms almost everything in its price bracket on paper, and when it works, it's a delight. But the avalanche of user complaints about headbands snapping and sudden charging death can't be ignored. If your budget is rock-bottom and you need something for casual listening or travel, it's worth the risk—just factor in that you might need to use that 30-day return window. For everyone else, spend a bit more on a JBL or Soundcore and enjoy peace of mind alongside your music.

Usage Scores

Work (53.6)Calls (44)Music (68.9)Overall (65.3)Budget (69.3)Gaming (67.8)Studio (72.2)Commute (53.3)

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