Lenovo has expanded its Yoga brand again with a new pair of true wireless earbuds aimed at buyers who want a fairly modest price tag without giving up the usual checklist: active noise cancellation, multi-device pairing, and enough battery to survive a commute or two. The Lenovo Yoga True Wireless Noise Cancelling Earbuds launched in China for 599 yuan ($88), with a temporary discount cutting that to 509 yuan ($75).
The Lenovo Yoga earbuds offer up to 40dB active noise cancellation and up to 36 hours of battery life with the case. That puts them squarely in the crowded budget-to-midrange zone, where specs do a lot of the selling.
Lenovo is leaning on ecosystem tricks here, borrowing the ”instant pairing” and device pop-up playbook that has made premium rivals so sticky. In other words, the company is trying to make earbuds feel like a small part of a larger Lenovo stack, not just another cheap audio accessory.
Lenovo Yoga earbuds specifications
The hardware is straightforward but not bare-bones. Each earbud uses a 12.2mm dynamic driver, while ANC goes up to 40dB. Lenovo also fits three microphones into each bud and says voiceprint recognition plus environmental noise cancellation help separate speech from surrounding noise during calls.
- 12.2mm dynamic drivers
- Up to 40dB active noise cancellation
- Three microphones per earbud
- IPX4 water resistance
- 4.7 grams per earbud
Battery life is where the spec sheet starts to look more useful than flashy. Lenovo says the earbuds last up to seven hours on a single charge with ANC off, and up to 36 hours with the case. Turn ANC on and those figures drop to 4.5 hours and 24 hours, respectively. A 10-minute charge is good for about two hours of playback, and a full recharge takes roughly an hour.
A Lenovo-first feature set
Visually, Lenovo is playing it safe: pale off-white buds, a basic rounded charging case, and an IPX4 rating for sweat or light rain. The more interesting bit is the software side. Connecting them to a Lenovo Yoga PC triggers a dedicated pop-up notification, and the earbuds also support dual-device connectivity across different operating systems, with a triple tap used to switch between a laptop and a smartphone.
Settings, ANC modes, and touch controls can be adjusted through Lenovo PC Manager software. That kind of tight integration is the sort of thing Apple and Samsung have trained buyers to expect, and it is smart for Lenovo to copy the behavior rather than pretend audio alone will carry the pitch. The catch, of course, is that the best tricks are only compelling if enough people already live in the ecosystem.
How Lenovo stacks up against recent rivals
The timing is not subtle. Other audio brands are pushing louder numbers: Edifier recently announced the FitBuds Turbo with LDAC, 49dB ANC, and up to 40 hours of battery life, while Dangbei’s Air 1S earbuds arrive with a touchscreen charging case, AI translation, and LHDC 5.0 audio. Against that backdrop, Lenovo’s pitch is less about winning a spec-sheet brawl and more about bundling decent sound with familiar PC integration.
That should give Lenovo some appeal among existing Yoga laptop owners, especially those who want one pair of earbuds for meetings and casual listening. The open question is whether the brand can make that integration feel indispensable, or whether buyers will just compare the numbers, shrug, and pick the louder headline from somewhere else.

