Apple’s standard AirPods start at $129 and are fine daily drivers. But you’re absolutely paying a heavy premium for the Apple logo and ecosystem convenience. If you care primarily about sound reproduction, actual battery depth, and active noise cancellation (ANC) as a standard feature, you can get so much more for less.
These three highly rated alternatives under $100 deliver features and audio quality that outperform the standard AirPods.
Best overall value: EarFun Air Pro 4+ ($99.99)
The EarFun Air Pro 4+ is arguably the most complete sub-$100 earbud on the market.
Unlike standard AirPods, which offer zero acoustic seal and no ANC, these use a dual-driver setup to deliver sharp treble separation and deep, controlled bass.
They also support high-res codecs like aptX Lossless and LDAC—meaning if you use an Android device or a high-res player, you get significantly higher data transmission than Apple’s standard AAC limit.
You get up to 50dB of adaptive noise cancellation and nearly 11 hours of continuous playback on a single charge with ANC off, easily eclipsing Apple’s five-hour limit.
ANC heavyweight: Anker Soundcore Liberty 4 NC ($99.99)
The Anker Liberty 4 NC is explicitly engineered to target premium noise cancellation at a fraction of the typical cost, with custom frequency-targeting algorithm reducing ambient low-frequency rumble by up to 98.5%.

The companion Soundcore app offers a full 8-band custom EQ, hearing profile tests, and customizable touch controls, offering flexibility Apple restricts inside its iOS-only settings menu. It also includes an IPX4 water resistance rating and roughly 10 hours of battery life with ANC enabled.
Audiophile choice: SoundPEATS Capsule3 Pro+ ($89.99)
If your priority is pure sonic clarity rather than finding an earbud for gym sessions or phone calls, the Soundpeats Capsule3 Pro+ is the clear standout.

It utilizes solid-state xMEMS driver technology alongside a traditional dynamic driver. Because xMEMS drivers use a silicon membrane that acts instantly to electrical signals, the transient response is dramatically cleaner and more precise than the traditional moving-coil speakers found in AirPods.
The result is tight, distortion-free sub-bass and a wider soundstage that makes acoustic tracks feel distinct rather than compressed. The active noise cancellation and microphone quality are perfectly adequate, but they won’t quite match the raw isolation power of the Anker Liberty 4 NC.
