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Wednesday, August 28, 2019

Best soundbars of 2019: Reviews and buying advice

Technology has enabled TVs to become ever flatter, thinner, and lighter, but it can’t overcome the laws of physics when it comes to audio. Filling a room with sound requires substantial speakers that can move a lot of air, and those types of speakers just won’t fit inside a thin TV chassis. That’s where soundbars come in.

We’ll explain all the latest soundbar technology, show you the most important features you should look for, and name our top picks in budget, mid-range, and high-end categories. We’ll also provide links to all our reviews of soundbars currently on the market, so you can find exactly the right one for your needs.

Here are our current top picks, with brief summaries explaining our reasoning. These will change over time as new models come in for evaluation. Our soundbar reviews will go into some depth, so we encourage you to follow the links to read them in their entirety. Beneath our top picks you’ll find some general guidance about soundbars, followed by explanations of the features you should consider when choosing one. Links at the bottom of the page will take you the rest of our soundbar reviews.

Updated August 28, 2019 to add our review of the JBL Link Bar, the result of a 15-month collaboration between Google and JBL that combines a Google Assistant smart speaker and an Android TV video-streaming box into a Chromecast-enabled soundbar. Unfortunately, we quickly discovered that the JBL Link Bar was not worth the wait, as it makes far too many compromises in its effort to be an all-in-one home audio solution.

Best budget soundbar

Yamaha’s YAS-108 soundbar delivers great sound in a small and affordable package, and unlike most competitors at this price point, it has a wired subwoofer output so you can beef up its low end with just about any aftermarket sub. And if you own a 4K UHD TV, you’ll be happy to learn that this soundbar can pass HDR information through to your big-screen TV. Support for dual simultaneous Bluetooth device connections lets you instantly switch from one smartphone or tablet to another. The only feature that’s missing: Wi-Fi support for Yamaha’s excellent MusicCast multi-room audio system. 

 

Runner-up

Samsung’s entry-level soundbar doesn’t have as many features as Yamaha’s similarly priced offering, but it does come with a wireless subwoofer, which makes it easy for us to recommend as the runner-up in this category. It’s a particularly good choice if you have one of Samsung’s lower-priced smart TVs.

 

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