Sony just launched the 1000XM6 headphones, pushing the XM5 model into second place in the lineup but the performance gap feels like a minimum while the price difference stretches over… $200! The new XM6 demands $449 while Amazon just dropped the WH-1000XM5 to $248 from its usual $399 (38% off), hitting a record low that makes this generation the obvious choice.
This deal also positions the XM5 at roughly half the price of Apple’s AirPods Max which costs about $550 and delivers similar specs without justifying that massive premium. The feature sets across all these flagship models is nearly identical with slight tweaks that don’t justify paying double and makes this almost 40% Black Friday discount surprisingly aggressive for headphones that rank among the best available.
Noise Cancellation That Blocks the World
Adaptive noise cancelation technology automatically adjusts to your environment and head position with multiple microphones that sample ambient sound and produce opposing frequencies that cancel unwanted noise. You get great silence on planes, trains, and busy offices where background chatter normally destroys concentration and forces you to crank the volume to dangerous levels.
The Auto NC optimizer analyzes atmospheric pressure and adjusts cancellation accordingly which matters more than you might think when you’re flying at altitude, where changes in air density alter how sound travels. This system works so well that you’ll sometimes take the headphones off to check whether the announcements are playing or whether the cancellation merely served to block them out completely.
With noise canceling activated, battery life extends to 30 hours and covers weeks of daily commutes before needing a charge. Quick charging saves you when you forget to charge overnight and rush out the door: three hours of playback from just three minutes plugged in. The lightweight design distributes pressure evenly across your head, preventing the fatigue and headaches that plague cheaper headphones after an hour of wear. Soft ear cushions seal around your ears without creating that uncomfortable vacuum feeling, maintaining comfort during marathon listening sessions where lesser headphones become unbearable.
Sound quality delivers Sony’s signature balanced profile, with detailed mids, clear highs, and controlled bass that doesn’t overwhelm everything else into muddy soup. The 40mm drivers produce accurate audio reproduction across all frequencies, letting you hear instrument separation in complex mixes and subtle details in well-produced tracks.
Alexa voice control responds to commands without touching your phone, though Google Assistant and Siri also work if you prefer different ecosystems. The speak-to-chat feature automatically pauses music when you start talking, then resumes after you finish your conversation and removes the annoyance of manually controlling playback during brief interactions.
Multipoint connectivity lets you pair with two devices at once and fluidly switch from your laptop for work calls to your phone for music without needing to constantly disconnect and reconnect. Touch controls reside on the ear cups and manage volume, track skipping, and call management via swipes and taps, though the learning curve takes a few days before gestures become second nature. A carrying case with the headphones protects them during travel and folds flat to save bag space, while the headphones themselves fold into a compact shape rather than just having the ear cups swivel flat.
At $248 instead of $399, you’re saving $151 on headphones that match or outperform the competition at significantly higher price points including Apple’s AirPods Max at double this Black Friday price. That value gets even clearer when you put this deal up against the new XM6 at $449; for $201 extra, you’re getting marginal improvements that most won’t notice in real-world use.



