Noise-canceling headphones have gone from a luxury perk for frequent flyers to something most of us consider essential. Whether you work from a busy coffee shop, commute on a rattling subway, or just want to tune out the world for an hour, a great pair of ANC cans can transform your day. The problem is that every major audio brand now offers a flagship set, and the differences between them have gotten razor-thin.

To find the best pair for 2026, we tested five top contenders over three months of real-world use: office days, cross-country flights, gym sessions, and long weekend listening marathons. We evaluated noise cancellation, sound quality, comfort, battery life, and that intangible "do I actually want to reach for these every morning" factor. Here are the results, ranked from fifth to first.

#5 — Bowers & Wilkins Px8

Bowers and Wilkins premium headphones

Bowers & Wilkins Px8 — $699

The Px8 is the most luxurious headphone on this list. Lambskin leather ear cushions, a machined aluminum frame, and a sound signature that audiophiles will swoon over. The midrange is lush and the treble detail is extraordinary. So why is it last? Two reasons: the noise cancellation is noticeably weaker than the competition, letting in low-frequency rumble that the Sony and Bose squash effortlessly. And at $699, it's simply too expensive for what amounts to average ANC performance. If you listen primarily at home or in quiet offices, the Px8 is a stunner. For commuters and travelers, look elsewhere.

#4 — Sennheiser Momentum 5

Sennheiser headphones on a table

Sennheiser Momentum 5 — $399

Sennheiser has refined everything that made the Momentum 4 a sleeper hit. The fold-flat design is genuinely compact, the battery now stretches to a claimed 62 hours, and the sound quality is warm, detailed, and punchy without being fatiguing. The ANC is solid—not class-leading, but good enough to handle airplane cabin noise and open-plan offices. Where the Momentum 5 falters is its touch controls: swipes on the right ear cup frequently misregister, and adjusting volume mid-walk is an exercise in frustration. The companion app also lacks the granular EQ flexibility that Sony and Apple provide. A strong contender, but the user experience holds it back from the podium.

#3 — Apple AirPods Max 2

Apple AirPods Max headphones

Apple AirPods Max 2 — $549

Apple finally gave the AirPods Max the update it desperately needed. USB-C charging, adaptive audio that blends ANC with transparency mode based on your environment, and improved Spatial Audio that makes Dolby Atmos tracks feel genuinely immersive. If you live inside the Apple ecosystem, the seamless switching between iPhone, iPad, and Mac is unmatched. The ANC is excellent—on par with Bose—and the build quality still feels premium two years after the original's design debut. The downsides? They're heavy at 384 grams, the case is still awkwardly shaped, and the $549 price tag is hard to justify when the Sony outperforms them sonically for $150 less. For Apple loyalists, these are a no-brainer. For everyone else, keep reading.

#2 — Bose QuietComfort Ultra

Bose noise canceling headphones

Bose QuietComfort Ultra — $429

For the longest time, Bose was synonymous with noise cancellation. The QuietComfort Ultra proves they haven't lost their edge. The ANC here is ferocious—flip it on in a loud environment and the silence is almost startling. Bose's CustomTune feature, which maps your ear canal shape on first use, creates a personalized sound profile that genuinely makes a difference. Sound quality has improved dramatically from past QC models; the bass is punchy and controlled, and the immersive audio mode adds a convincing sense of space. Comfort is superb, with plush cushions that disappear during long sessions. The only thing keeping the QC Ultra from the top spot is sound quality: in direct A/B testing with our winner, the Sony resolves more detail in the high end and presents a wider soundstage. It's close, though—very close.

#1 — Sony WH-1000XM6

Sony wireless noise canceling headphones

Sony WH-1000XM6 — $399

Sony's XM series has been the headphone to beat for years, and the XM6 extends that dynasty. The new Integrated Processor V3 delivers ANC that matches Bose's best while simultaneously improving audio quality. The soundstage is wide and airy, vocals have a natural presence, and bass hits with authority without ever feeling bloated. Battery life is a staggering 40 hours with ANC on, multipoint connects to two devices simultaneously without hiccups, and the Speak-to-Chat feature—which pauses music when you start talking—actually works reliably now. At $399, it undercuts the AirPods Max 2 by $150 and the Px8 by $300 while outperforming both in ANC. This is our pick.

The Winner: Sony WH-1000XM6

Pros

Cons

How We Tested

Every pair was used as a daily driver for at least two weeks. We tested ANC on New York City subways, a cross-country flight from JFK to LAX, and in a deliberately noisy open-plan office. Sound quality was evaluated using a reference playlist spanning classical orchestral recordings, hip-hop, jazz vocals, and modern pop. Battery tests were run with ANC on, volume at 50%, and Bluetooth codec set to AAC for consistency. Comfort was assessed during continuous four-hour listening sessions.

The gap between these five headphones is smaller than it's ever been. Any of them will serve you well. But the Sony XM6 threads the needle of price, performance, and polish better than anything else on the market right now.

The Bottom Line

If you want the absolute best noise cancellation with top-tier sound and don't mind a plastic build, the Sony WH-1000XM6 is the one to buy. If you're deep in the Apple ecosystem and value seamless device switching, the AirPods Max 2 is worth the premium. And if ANC is your single most important criterion above all else, the Bose QuietComfort Ultra will make you forget the outside world exists. No matter which you choose, your commute is about to get a lot more peaceful.

Sarah Kim

Sarah covers productivity tools, audio gear, and workspace technology. When she's not testing gadgets, she's optimizing her home office setup for the hundredth time.