Sennheiser is entering the open-ear true wireless category with the ACCENTUM Clip, a new clip-on style earbud designed for listeners who want to hear their surroundings without giving up entirely on sound quality.
That last part matters. Open-ear earbuds have become a real category, not just a fitness accessory hiding in the headphone aisle. The appeal is obvious: no ear canal seal, better awareness while walking, commuting, running, working, or pretending to listen during a meeting. The problem has usually been the sound. Bass can be lightweight, treble can get splashy, and privacy can be questionable if the driver is not properly aimed.
Sennheiser says ACCENTUM Clip is designed to address those issues with a 12mm dynamic driver, Hi-Res Audio Wireless certification, LDAC support, Bluetooth 6.0, and a clip-style design that leaves the ear canal open for natural ambient awareness rather than using an electronic transparency mode.
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Open Ear Listening Without Electronic Pass Through

The ACCENTUM Clip does not try to block the world and then pipe it back in with microphones. Its open design allows outside sound to remain audible naturally, which is the whole point of this category.
That gives it a very different use case than traditional ANC wireless earbuds. These are not for airplanes, subway platforms at full roar, or shutting out the person next to you who has mistaken speakerphone for a personality. They are for daily movement, office use, calls, light workouts, and situations where isolation is either unnecessary or a bad idea.
The earbuds weigh 6.8 grams each and use a flexible silicone bridge to keep the speaker positioned near the ear without inserting anything into the ear canal. Sennheiser also says the speaker geometry and built-in damping are designed to reduce unwanted sound leakage, which is one of the more important technical challenges with open-ear designs.
LDAC, Dynamic EQ, and App Control

Sennheiser is positioning ACCENTUM Clip as a more audio-focused open-ear option. The earbuds support SBC, AAC, and LDAC, with LDAC available when paired with a compatible source device. That will matter most for Android users who want a higher-bitrate Bluetooth option; iPhone users will be using AAC.
The company has also added Dynamic EQ, which adjusts the tonal balance as volume changes. At lower levels, the EQ compensates for tonal shifts; as volume rises, the curve backs off to maintain balance and avoid distortion. That is a useful feature in an open-ear product because listeners often raise volume to overcome street noise or gym noise, which can make lesser designs sound strained.
ACCENTUM Clip also works with the Sennheiser Smart Control Plus app, including a 5-band EQ, shareable presets, and Sound Check guided tuning.
Battery Life and Durability
Battery life is rated at up to 9 hours per charge, with the charging case providing three additional top-ups for up to 36 hours total. A 10-minute USB-C quick charge provides up to 2 hours of playback.
The earbuds are IP54 rated for dust and sweat resistance, which puts them in the right lane for commuting, walking, gym use, and lighter outdoor activity. Each earbud also includes a dual-microphone system with AI noise reduction for voice calls. Bluetooth 6.0 brings multipoint connectivity, independent earbud use, and Google Fast Pair support.

Where ACCENTUM Clip Fits in the Open Ear Category
Sennheiser is not walking into an empty room. Bose, Sony, Shokz, Cleer Audio, Soundcore, Nothing, JBL, and Huawei have all pushed open-ear listening in different directions.
The Bose Ultra Open Earbuds ($299) helped make the clip-style format more visible, combining an open-ear fit with Bose OpenAudio, Immersive Audio, multipoint support, and up to roughly 7 hours of battery life depending on use.
Sony has taken a different approach with the LinkBuds Open ($229), using an 11mm open-ring driver that keeps the center of the earbud open for ambient sound. Sony also includes Adaptive Volume Control, DSEE processing, app-based EQ, multipoint, IPX4 water resistance, and up to 22 hours of total playback.
Shokz OpenDots 2 ($199) is another important competitor, especially for fitness and all-day wear. It features bone and air conduction mics, a spherical acoustic system, customizable EQ modes, IP57 water resistance, and up to 10 hours per charge or 40 hours with the case.
Cleer Audio also deserves to be in this conversation. Its ARC series has been one of the more aggressive attempts to make open-ear earbuds sound less compromised, especially with larger drivers, Snapdragon Sound, higher-quality Bluetooth codec support on select models, app-based tuning, and durable sport-friendly designs. The ARC 4 and ARC 5 ($219) are particularly relevant here because Cleer has clearly treated open-ear listening as an audio category, not just a safer workout-earbud category.
The Soundcore AeroClip ($149) brings the clip-on idea down to a lower price point with an open-ear design, 12mm drivers, IP55 rating, multipoint, AI call microphones, and up to 32 hours of total battery life. Nothing’s Ear open also sits in this awareness-first category with an IP54 rating, dual connection, Clear Voice Technology for calls, and up to 30 hours of total playback.
That is the context Sennheiser has to deal with. The market already understands the benefit of open-ear listening. ACCENTUM Clip has to prove that Sennheiser’s tuning, LDAC support, app control, and physical design can make it one of the better-sounding choices in a category that still has plenty of room to improve.

The Bottom Line
The Sennheiser ACCENTUM Clip is aimed at listeners who want true wireless earbuds that do not seal them off from the world. The feature set is stronger than basic open-ear fare: LDAC, Bluetooth 6.0, 36-hour total battery life, app-based EQ, IP54 protection, and a lightweight clip design.
The big question is sound quality. Sennheiser clearly knows how to tune open-back headphones, but open-ear true wireless earbuds are a different fight. If ACCENTUM Clip delivers fuller bass, controlled leakage, and a less compromised tonal balance than many rivals, Sennheiser could have a serious entry in a category that is finally growing up.
Price & Availability
Sennheiser ACCENTUM Clip will be available in Black and Cream. According to the Canadian press release, the earbuds will be available in Canada starting July 23, 2026 through Sennheiser’s consumer site and Best Buy for $269.95 CAD. U.S. pricing and availability were not included in the supplied Canadian release.
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