Bose QuietComfort Ultra 2 Earbuds Drop to $250 in Desert Gold

Bose QuietComfort Ultra 2 Earbuds Drop to $250 in Desert Gold

> At a Glance

> – Bose QuietComfort Ultra 2 Earbuds hit $250 on Amazon and Best Buy-$50 off the usual price

> – Only the Desert Gold color hits this low, while Midnight Violet falls to $269 on Amazon or $255 on Best Buy

> – Why it matters: Premium ANC earbuds that rival Apple’s AirPods Pro 3 are suddenly cheaper for non-iPhone users

Bose’s flagship noise-canceling earbuds just received their first major price cut since launch. If you skipped yesterday’s AirPods Pro 3 deal because you’re on Android or Windows, this markdown gives you top-tier sound without the Apple lock-in.

What’s New in the Ultra 2

Bose kept the same drivers as the first-gen Ultra but retuned the processing for wider dynamic range and stronger noise suppression. Our reviewer Parker Hall noted the Aware mode now smooths sudden loud sounds while still letting voices through.

  • Built-in wireless charging in the case
  • Six-hour battery per charge with ANC on; 24 hours total with case
  • Auto-calibration chirp reshapes audio to your ear canal
  • Full EQ and touch-control customization inside the Bose app

Where to Grab the Deal

Color Amazon Best Buy
Desert Gold $250 $250
Midnight Violet $269 $255
noisecanceling

Stock is moving quickly in the Desert Gold finish, so act fast if you want the deepest discount.

Key Takeaways

  • $50 savings applies only to Desert Gold at Amazon and Best Buy
  • Bose QC Ultra 2 matches AirPods Pro 3 on ANC but works across all Bluetooth devices
  • Deal includes full app-based EQ and spatial-audio tweaks

If premium noise cancelation and platform-agnostic earbuds top your list, this limited-time sale is the lowest price yet on Bose’s latest flagship buds.

Author

  • My name is Caleb R. Anderson, and I’m a Fort Worth–based journalist covering local news and breaking stories that matter most to our community.

    Caleb R. Anderson is a Senior Correspondent at News of Fort Worth, covering city government, urban development, and housing across Tarrant County. A former state accountability reporter, he’s known for deeply sourced stories that show how policy decisions shape everyday life in Fort Worth neighborhoods.

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