AirPods Pro 3 Removes 2x More Noise Than Previous Generation

What You Need to Know
- Apple launched AirPods Pro 3 ad featuring Real Madrid’s Vini Jr. during 2026 FIFA World Cup.
- AirPods Pro 3 claim world’s best noise cancellation among best-selling wireless earbuds at $249.
- Pro 3 removes up to 2x more noise than Pro 2 and 4x more than original.
- New features include heart rate sensing, FDA-cleared hearing aid functionality, and live translation.
Apple launched a World Cup-timed ad for the AirPods Pro 3 featuring Real Madrid forward Vini Jr., who dances through city streets to music no one else can hear. The timing is deliberate: the 2026 FIFA World Cup is underway, and Vini Jr. is one of the tournament’s most recognizable faces, giving Apple a global stage that aligns with one of the most-watched sporting events on the planet.
The campaign leans hard on the noise cancellation claim. Apple says the AirPods Pro 3 offer the “world’s best in-ear Active Noise Cancellation,” citing a July 2025 evaluation against the IEC 60268-24 standard compared with best-selling wireless earbuds. That benchmark language is doing a lot of work: “best-selling” is a carefully chosen qualifier that excludes over-ear headphones, where Sony and Bose have long held strong positions in noise cancellation.
The generational improvement numbers are worth examining directly. Apple claims the Pro 3 removes up to 2x more noise than the AirPods Pro 2 and up to 4x more than the original Pro. Those multipliers compress three product generations into a single marketing line, which makes the original AirPods Pro look considerably worse in hindsight.
Beyond the noise
At $249, the AirPods Pro 3 carry the same price as their predecessor at launch. The feature set has expanded well beyond audio:
- Heart rate sensing during workouts
- Hearing aid functionality (FDA-cleared)
- Live Translation for real-time conversation
- Spatial audio with head tracking
The hearing aid feature is arguably the most consequential addition Apple has made to this product line, but it rarely leads the marketing. A footballer dancing through streets sells earbuds; static noise in one ear does not, which is probably why Apple keeps the health angle in the spec sheet rather than the ad spot.
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