• Skip to main content
  • Skip to secondary menu
  • Skip to footer

Technologies.org

Technology Trends: Follow the Money

  • Technology Events 2026-2027
  • Sponsored Post
  • Technology Markets
  • About
    • GDPR
  • Contact

Hearables Are the New Wearables

September 9, 2019 By admin Leave a Comment

Global wearable device shipments grew 85.2% in the second quarter of 2019 (2Q19) as shipments totaled 67.7 million units according to new data from the International Data Corporation (IDC) Worldwide Quarterly Wearable Device Tracker. Earworn devices (hearables) were among the fastest growing categories, capturing 46.9% of the overall wearables market during the quarter, up from 24.8% a year ago. Driving that growth was a slew of new products and consumers who purchased their second wearable, a hearable, to use in parallel with existing watches or wrist bands.

“The growing popularity of the hearables segment is forcing existing brands to reconsider past designs when launching new products, as evident in Samsung’s popular Galaxy Buds, while also attracting new brands to market,” said Jitesh Ubrani research manager for IDC Mobile Device Trackers. “And though it’s still early days, the market is showing signs of emerging subsegments such as hearables dedicated to sports from the likes of Jabra, premium hearables from companies such as Bose, and ones dedicated to hearing loss such as those from Nuheara.”

“What has been driving the hearables market is the experience,” added Ramon T. Llamas, research director, Wearables. “Quality audio is still the hallmark of hearables, but additional features – ranging from adjusting audio to smart assistants and health and fitness – increase their value and utility. As prices come down and more features come on board, this next generation of hearables will become the new normal for earphones.”

Hearable Company Highlights

Apple led the market for hearables by capturing 50.2% share during the quarter. New products such as the refreshed AirPods and the latest from the Beats lineup helped the company grow 218.2% compared to last year. With the iPhone business facing challenges, Apple’s wearables business, particularly the popularity of the AirPods, is helping the company once again become the de facto standard though this time it’s for hearables.

Samsung, thanks to its self-branded devices and the JBL brand, captured the second position during the quarter. The highly publicized Galaxy Buds were one of the company’s most popular pair of hearables as the pair was bundled with the purchase of Samsung’s latest smartphone. Additionally, the JBL Tune 500BT managed to capture a large share as the low price and wide availability helped move a lot of volume.

Xiaomi’s AirDots (amongst other models) helped the company capture the third position. Though the company primarily sells its hearables in China, Xiaomi has already started to make inroads in other markets such as Europe and the Middle East with its smartphones and wrist bands. IDC expects Xiaomi to follow suit with its hearables.

Bose, a company with a long history of headphones and other audio products, ranked fourth in this market. The company’s long lineage in audio and premium offering has helped set the company apart from the remainder of the pack. The QC35ii and the SoundSport Free were two of its most popular products during the quarter. The latest Headphones 700 and upcoming Earbuds 500 should help the company maintain momentum in the upcoming quarters.

ReSound, the parent company of Jabra, rounded out the top 5 with 5.1% share and 132.9% growth. Jabra’s Elite Active 65t have been extremely popular as an alternative to Apple’s AirPods and have also been promoted heavily on Amazon’s store, allowing the company to pitch itself as a strong consumer brand in addition to its preexisting headset business that is targeted at office workers. At IFA 2019, Jabra announced the next version of the Elite Active series, which helps modernize the hearables and should provide healthy competition for others on the list.

Top 5 Wearable Companies, Hearable Devices only, by Shipment Volume, Market Share, and
Year-Over-Year Growth, Q2 2019
 (shipments in millions)

Company

2Q19
Shipments

2Q19 Market
Share

2Q18
Shipments

2Q18 Market
Share

Year-over-
Year Growth

1. Apple

15.9

50.2%

5.0

55.2%

218.2%

2. Samsung

3.3

10.2%

0.9

10.2%

252.1%

3. Xiaomi

2.1

6.5%

0.3

2.8%

714.8%

4. Bose

1.8

5.7%

0.5

5.1%

288.1%

5. ReSound

1.6

5.1%

0.7

7.7%

132.9%

Others

7.1

22.3%

1.7

19.0%

310.5%

Total

31.8

100.0%

9.1

100.0%

250.0%

Source: IDC Worldwide Quarterly Wearables Tracker, September 9, 2019

Note: IDC defines Earwear/Hearables as the wearables that hang on or plug into the ear. The device must operate wirelessly and provide stereo sound while also including at least one of the following features:

Track health/fitness (e.g., Samsung Gear IconX).
Modify audio, and not just noise reduction (e.g., Nuheara IQbuds).
Provide language translation on the device (e.g., Waverly Labs).
Enable smart assistants at the touch of a button or through hotword detection even if the assistant is running on another device such as a smartphone (e.g., Apple’s AirPods and Google’s Pixel Buds).

In addition to the table above, a graphic illustrating worldwide market share for the top 5 hearables companies over the previous five quarters is available by viewing this press release on IDC.com.

About IDC Trackers
IDC Tracker products provide accurate and timely market size, vendor share, and forecasts for hundreds of technology markets from more than 100 countries around the globe. Using proprietary tools and research processes, IDC’s Trackers are updated on a semiannual, quarterly, and monthly basis. Tracker results are delivered to clients in user-friendly excel deliverables and on-line query tools. To see more of IDC’s worldwide wearables market data, go to https://www.idc.com/promo/wearablevendor.

For more information about IDC’s Worldwide Quarterly Mobile Phone Tracker, please contact Kathy Nagamine at 650-350-6423 or [email protected].

About IDC
International Data Corporation (IDC) is the premier global provider of market intelligence, advisory services, and events for the information technology, telecommunications, and consumer technology markets. With more than 1,100 analysts worldwide, IDC offers global, regional, and local expertise on technology and industry opportunities and trends in over 110 countries. IDC’s analysis and insight helps IT professionals, business executives, and the investment community to make fact-based technology decisions and to achieve their key business objectives. Founded in 1964, IDC is a wholly-owned subsidiary of International Data Group (IDG), the world’s leading media, data and marketing services company. To learn more about IDC, please visit www.idc.com.

Filed Under: Tech Tagged With: Hearables, Wearables

Reader Interactions

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Footer

Recent Posts

  • Manna’s Second Act: From Drone Novelty to Logistics Infrastructure
  • Britain Advances SMR Deployment with £300M Owner’s Engineer Contract
  • OpenAI Closes $122B Funding Round at $852B Valuation
  • Qodo’s $70M Series B Shows Where Enterprise AI Coding Is Really Headed
  • Agentic Compliance: When Governance Finally Catches Up With AI
  • IQM’s BlackRock-Backed Financing Signals a More Serious European Quantum Push
  • Starcloud Raises $170M to Build Data Centers in Space
  • Sycamore Raises $65M to Build the Operating System for Autonomous Enterprise AI
  • The Open Bridge: Why Vector Databases Need the Model Context Protocol
  • Mitsubishi Electric Bets on Sakana AI to Turn Industrial Complexity into Competitive Advantage

Media Partners

  • Market Analysis
  • Cybersecurity Market
Raspberry Pi’s Earnings Beat Signals a Shift From Hobbyist Hardware to Embedded Infrastructure
Betting the Backbone: A Multi-Year Positioning on AMD, Broadcom, and Nvidia
Nvidia’s Groq 3 LPX: The $20B Bet That Could Define the Inference Era
Why Arm’s New AI Chip Changes the Rules of the Game
A Map Without Hormuz: Rewiring Global Oil Flows Through Fragmented Corridors
RoboForce’s $52 Million Raise Signals That Physical AI Is Moving From Demo Stage to Industrial Scale
The Hormuz Crisis: Winners and Losers in the Global Energy Shock
Zohran Mamdani’s Politics of Confiscation
Beyond Shipyards: Stephen Carmel’s Maritime Warning and the Hard Reality of Rebuilding an Oceanic System
Memory Crunch: Why Prices Are Surging and Why Making More Memory Isn’t Easy
Ashdod Port Has Blocked 134,000 Cyberattacks—and Kept Israel’s Trade Moving
Black Hat Asia 2026, April 23–24, Singapore
World Backup Day 2026: Why Recovery Has Become the Real Test of Cyber Resilience
Cyberhaven Launches Agentic AI Security as Shadow Agents Move Onto the Enterprise Endpoint
Palo Alto Networks Rewrites Security for the Agentic AI Era
RSAC Conference 2026, March 23–26, San Francisco
AI-Speed Warfare Comes to Cybersecurity: Booz Allen’s Vellox Suite Signals a Structural Shift
Cape Rebuilds the Mobile Carrier from Scratch, Raises $100M to Turn Privacy into Infrastructure
Semgrep Pushes Deeper Into AI-Native AppSec
Cloaked Bets Big on AI-Driven Privacy as $375 Million Raise Signals a Shift in Digital Power

Media Partners

  • Market Research Media
  • Technology Conferences
Netflix Price Hikes, The Economics of Dominance in a Saturated Streaming Market
America’s Brands Keep Winning Even as America Itself Slips
Kioxia’s Storage Gambit: Flash Steps Into the AI Memory Hierarchy
Mamdani Strangling New York
The Rise of Faceless Creators: Picsart Launches Persona and Storyline for AI Character-Driven Content
Apple TV Arrives on The Roku Channel, Expanding the Streaming Platform Wars
Why Attraction-Grabbing Stations Win at Tech Events
Why Nvidia Let Go of Arm, and Why It Matters Now
When the Market Wants a Story, Not Numbers: Rethinking AMD’s Q4 Selloff
BBC and the Gaza War: How Disproportionate Attention Reshapes Reality
JSNation 2026, June 11 & June 15, Amsterdam and Remote
ICMC 2026, July 30–31, Long Beach
Elevate 2026, April 22–24, 2026, Atlanta
WWDC 2026, June 8–12, Cupertino & Online
Zip Forward Europe 2026, April 16, 2026, London
AI Summit: Operationalizing Intelligence and Driving Innovation, April 16, 2026, Woburn, Massachusetts
GTC 2026, March 16–19, San Jose
Taiwan’s AI Ecosystem Steps Into the Spotlight at NVIDIA GTC, March 16–19, 2026
COMPUTEX 2026, June 2–5, Taipei
360° Mobility Mega Shows 2026, April 14–17, Taipei

Copyright © 2022 Technologies.org

Media Partners: Market Analysis & Market Research and Exclusive Domains, Photography