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Verdict

Final has delivered a splendid pair of affordable ANC headphones in the UX3000. Their rich, musical performance is easily one of the best at this price point, and noise cancellation is effective to keep everyday sounds out to hear your music without interruption. They’re short of smarts and features; but if all you want is a simple, unfussy pair of great-sounding headphones, then these come highly recommended.

Pros

  • Good comfort
  • Effective ANC
  • Rich, warm sound
  • Solid battery life
  • Simple operation

Cons

  • Stripped-down feature set
  • Minimalist looks may be interpreted as bland

Availability

  • UKRRP: £119
  • USARRP: $149
  • EuropeRRP: €139

Key Features

  • Hybrid noise cancellationFeatures two mics on each earcup to block out noise from before
  • aptX Low LatencyAims to deliver high quality with minimal latency

Introduction

Final is probably best known for its extravagant and pricey wired headphones, so the UX3000 are pretty much the antithesis of that.

For one, they’re wireless – Final’s first ever ANC wireless headphone. Number two, they’re affordable, priced below the likes of options from Cleer and Urbanista.

With a stripped-down aesthetic and feature set, the Final UX3000 aim to provide hi-fi quality sound on your commute. It isn’t often we bet against Final delivering on the promises, and we’re not about to start with the UX3000 ANC headphones.

Design

  • Minimalist appearance
  • Simple operation
  • Fine comfort levels

Simple is the word that best describes the UX3000, and they’re simple in the best sense. One button to turn them on and the same button for playback. Volume and track skipping are handled by the same controls on the right ear cup, while on the left there’s a button for noise cancellation. No touch controls, no control scheme to try to remember – just press and play.

Final UX3000 side view

Appearance-wise, these headphones that don’t stray far from the template. The adjustable headband is super-comfortable to put on and the headphones are light, too, which helps with long periods of wear. As do the oval-shaped earcups (with enough space inside for my larger ears) and “low-resilience” earpads that provide a plush point of contact with your head. I don’t remember encountering much in the way of discomfort wearing the UX3000 – the fit and clamping force are the right side of tight, without making their presence felt in an onerous manner.

Final UX3000 headband

The black finish is stark in appearance, with the white lettering and logos providing a minimalist aesthetic that amplifies the Final’s sense of not wanting to attract much attention. Look closer and the headphones are coated in a “premium Shibo” finish – Shibo an old Japanese word for wrinkle on the surface of paper or leather. It looks distinctive, as if a graffiti artist has added their own subtle touch – and, according to Final, it counters against dirt and fingerprints. I like it.

Final UX3000 logo

The Final UX3000 can be rotated to fold flat and there’s a little more rotation possible to help the best fit. They’re collapsible, too, which allows them to be stowed in the accompanying pouch in lieu of a hard carry case. There’s an elegance that isn’t always evident at headphones around the lower price points – the plastic and creaky-sounding Cleer Enduro ANC are a case in the point, which these headphones easily trump in the design and comfort stakes.

Features

  • 25 hours with ANC
  • aptX Bluetooth support
  • Effective noise-cancellation performance
  • Good call quality

Final has decided to keep things simple on the feature front, a minimalist rather than a maximalist approach to doing things. Battery life is 25 hours with noise cancelling on, but switch it off and the UX3000 can deliver close to 35 hours before needing a charge. There’s no fast-charging support to get a quick boost, though, with charging from a dead battery taking 2.5 hours.

Final UX3000 vivid look

Bluetooth support is v5.0, and in terms of signal strength, these puts on a good show by keeping music playing without any inconveniencing stutters. Codec support on the spec sheets says the UX3000 will go all the way to aptX Low Latency, but I’ve only seen these Final headphones register up to aptX.

As a result of Bluetooth 5.0 there’s multipoint support as well, so the UX3000 can be connected to two devices at once – and, as Final explains it, you could be listening to music on one device before talking a call on another, which is pretty nifty for multi-tasking types. A wired connection brings the option of plugging the headphones into a computer or portable music player, although with a 20Hz to 20kHz frequency range, you won’t get any High-Res Audio support by doing so.

Final UX3000 folded

And onto the noise-cancelling performance, which is respectable. At this price point it would be much to ask for the performance of the Sony WH-1000XM5, which are thrice the price of the UX3000. Nevertheless, the ANC performance is astute, good at clearing away persistent sounds. With noise cancelling on, it becomes much easier to hear music than with it off.

So most but not all ambient sounds are diminished, with the general sound of the commute on the train quietened and the sounds of vehicles and voices making less of an impression. In that sense, the UX3000 hit the target and should make a good companion for everyday use and the commute. You can also take advantage of noise cancelling without powering on the headphones, if you need some peace and quiet.

Final UX3000 laid flat

Call quality is solid, so you could conceivably try these as a work-from-home headset. When used outside, the headphones’ microphones did pick some up wind and the traffic going past, but not enough to distract from the quality or clarity of my voice.

There is mention of an official app – the “my Final” app – but it’s simply a means of registering the product. There isn’t an English version available, either.

Sound Quality

  • Captivating sound for price
  • Warm, music performance
  • Excellent vocal quality

One aspect of the Final UX3000’s audio performance to note is that the headphones sound better with ANC on than they do without. It’s similar to the Ausounds AU-XT ANC I tested towards the beginning of 2022, with noise cancelling bringing a tighter focus and definition to music.

Final UX3000 on grass

The UX3000 are also one of the best-sounding ANC models at this price. Final’s pedigree with music has been calibrated in a truly impressive way at this more “budget” price. Right from the get-go, the Final exhibit a very confident approach and feel for music, producing a rich, flowing and musical performance that’s one of the best up to the £200 price.

Norah Jones’ voice in Don’t Know Why is tremendously expressive in tone, given lots of space, capturing the changes in the cadence of her voice with an acute sense of dynamism. The rich and warmth the Final offer makes for a smooth performance, instruments described in a natural tone, brightness of higher frequencies expressed brightly and with weightiness to the bass. The Final UX3000 show themselves to be a sparkling, nuanced performer at this price.

Final UX3000 buttons

Their warm tone means they lack a sense of crispness with crashing hi-hat cymbals, and arguably with songs that have fast pace to them, some detail and clarity is chalked off too compared to the Cleer Enduro ANC, which display a greater sense of definition and power behind their sound. Rhythmically, though, these Final headphones are more than capable and a slight adjustment on the volume ensures their feel for the dynamics of a track comes through better.

The soundstage they describe is spacious, wide and roomy with Fleetwood Mac’s Gold Dust Woman, which affords the various instruments space to exist and contributes to an enjoyable stereo image and depth. Their sense of timing across the frequency range is engaging, the soundstage coherently put together, offering some more space between instruments than the Cleer model.

The best-sounding ANC headphones below £150? I’d certainly say the Final can lay a claim to that title.

Final UX3000 earcup

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Should you buy it?

For excellent ANC sound at an affordable price A terrifically confident sounding pair of headphones that do a solid job of keeping sounds at bay using noise cancellation. As a budget ANC pair, these are one of the best.

For more features No ambient mode or much in the way of smarts isn’t unexpected at this price, and it will mean you’ll need to look a little further up the price ladder for those features.

Final Thoughts

Final has made budget headphones before, models that have impressed us greatly – and the UX3000 are a pretty fabulous-sounding pair of cans. The warmth and musical nature instantly shoot them up the list of one the best pairs to listen to at this price.

Offering effective noise control for the price, good comfort levels and an uncomplicated means of operation, they bear no smarts. This make them are a sturdy, simple and unflashy pair of headphones to get to grips with. There was a time when cheap meant a sacrifice on quality, but the Final UX3000 show that needn’t be the case.

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We test every headphones we review thoroughly over an extended period of time. We use industry standard tests to compare features properly. We’ll always tell you what we find. We never, ever, accept money to review a product.

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Tested for a month

Tested with real world use

Tested with a range of music genres

FAQs

Do the Final UX3000 support Alexa?

There’s no built-in support for voice assistants such as Alexa or Google Assistant with the UX3000.

Full specs

UK RRP
USA RRP
EU RRP
Manufacturer
IP rating
Battery Hours
ASIN
Release Date
Model Number
Audio Resolution
Noise Cancellation?
Connectivity
Colours
Frequency Range
Headphone Type

Jargon buster

ANC

ANC (Active Noise Cancellation) uses an array of microphones in a headphone to detect the frequency of the sound coming at the listener, with the ANC chip creating an inverse wave (i.e. opposing sound) to suppress any unwanted external noises.

Bluetooth 5.0

Bluetooth 5.0 is the latest iteration of the standard, and allows data to be sent at twice as much as speed over previous standards, cover four times as much in terms of distance and transfer eight times as much data.

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