Sennheiser is making its clearest move yet into the clip-style open-ear earbud fight. The company announced ACCENTUM Clip, a pair of true wireless earbuds that wrap around the ear instead of sealing the ear canal, with a feature list aimed at fixing the usual open-ear compromise: comfort and awareness are easy, but full sound is hard.
The headline specs are strong for this category. Sennheiser says ACCENTUM Clip supports Bluetooth 6.0, LDAC, Google Fast Pair, multipoint connectivity, independent earbud use, IP54 dust and sweat resistance, and up to 36 hours of total battery life with the case. The catch for U.S. readers is availability. Sennheiser’s announcement says Canada gets the earbuds first on July 23, 2026, at $269.95 CAD, with no U.S. launch date listed.

Why ACCENTUM Clip is different from ACCENTUM Open
Sennheiser already sells ACCENTUM Open, but ACCENTUM Clip is a different shape and a more ambitious feature play. Instead of a stem-style open bud, each Clip earbud uses a flexible silicone bridge that hooks around the outer ear. That should make it more secure for workouts, commutes, and people who never got a stable fit from open buds that only rest near the ear canal.
The design also keeps the central open-ear promise intact. ACCENTUM Clip does not rely on electronic transparency mode to pipe the world back in. It leaves the ear canal open so traffic, voices, and environmental cues remain naturally audible. That is the same reason open-ear products from brands like Shokz, Bose, Sony, and Huawei have been getting more attention, and it is why Tech My Money has been tracking the category through launches like Shokz OpenDots 2.
Sennheiser is selling sound quality as the real differentiator
Open-ear earbuds live with a physics problem. Because they do not seal the ear canal, they usually struggle with bass weight, isolation, and leakage. Sennheiser’s pitch is that ACCENTUM Clip brings more serious acoustic tuning to a category that often prioritizes comfort over fidelity.
Each earbud uses a 12 mm dynamic driver. Sennheiser says it tuned the driver for clarity, punchy bass, and smooth treble. The company also added Dynamic EQ, which adjusts the tuning as volume changes so lower-volume listening does not feel too thin and higher-volume playback does not become harsh or distorted.

The codec support is also notable. ACCENTUM Clip handles SBC and AAC for broad compatibility, but LDAC is the feature that makes it stand out from basic open-ear rivals. LDAC requires a compatible source device, so iPhone users should not expect that benefit. Android users with LDAC support may get higher-bitrate streaming than typical open earbuds offer.
Battery, calls, and real-world fit
Sennheiser says each ACCENTUM Clip earbud weighs 6.8 grams. The company compares that to a hotel key card and sleeve, which is a cute way of saying these are meant to disappear on the ear. The IP54 rating matters too. It gives the earbuds protection against dust and sweat, which fits the clip design’s workout-friendly pitch.
Battery life is one of the cleaner wins. Sennheiser claims up to nine hours on a charge, plus three additional top-ups from the case for up to 36 hours total. A 10-minute USB-C quick charge is rated for up to two hours of playback. That puts ACCENTUM Clip in a stronger position than many open earbuds that still feel like short-session accessories.

For calls, each earbud has a dual-microphone system paired with AI noise reduction. That is table-stakes language now, but it matters more on open designs because users are often wearing them outdoors or in shared spaces. Sennheiser also includes textured touch controls for volume, calls, and playback, plus app support through Smart Control Plus for a 5-band EQ, shareable presets, Sound Check, and connectivity settings.
The launch map is the weak spot
The product story is compelling, but the rollout is awkward. Sennheiser says ACCENTUM Clip will be available in Canada from Sennheiser-hearing.com and Best Buy starting July 23 for $269.95 CAD. The official release lists Black and Cream colorways and zero-plastic eco-friendly packaging.
What it does not provide is a U.S. price or U.S. date. That matters because Engadget’s discovery angle is useful here: U.S. buyers are likely to see the Canadian price converted mentally to about $190, but there is no official U.S. price to cite yet. For now, the cleanest read is that ACCENTUM Clip is a Canada-first Americas launch, not a confirmed U.S. release.
The open-ear category is growing up
ACCENTUM Clip lands at a moment when open-ear earbuds are becoming less niche. The early appeal was awareness and comfort. The next test is sound. If Sennheiser can make a clip-style design with convincing bass, controlled leakage, solid calls, and app-tunable sound, it has a real argument against rivals that still feel more like convenience gadgets than music-first earbuds.
That is also why ACCENTUM Clip fits Sennheiser’s broader 2026 consumer audio push. Tech My Money recently covered how Sennheiser Momentum 5 leans into audio quality, ANC, and repairability. ACCENTUM Clip is aiming lower in the lineup, but the editorial question is similar: can Sennheiser make practical everyday hardware without giving up the audio-first identity people expect from the brand?













































