Closed-back headphones usually trade openness for isolation, leaving you with a sound that feels boxed in. Dan Clark Audio is making the case that you don’t have to settle. The AEON CORE arrived on June 1, 2026 with a bold promise: a “supremely open and spacious” presentation from a sealed design, something closed-back fans rarely get to enjoy.
The trick lives in the driver. DCA built an all-new planar magnetic transducer engineered for higher efficiency, then paired it with revised tuning to chase that sense of air and space. On paper, the efficiency story checks out: the AEON CORE carries a 17-ohm impedance and roughly 97 dB/mW sensitivity, an easy-to-drive combination that doesn’t demand a desktop monster to wake up.
In fact, DCA says amplifiers delivering at least 125 mW into 16 ohms are enough to get these singing — which puts plenty of dongles, portable amps and modest desktop units squarely in play. That’s a refreshing change from the planar reputation for needing serious current before they come alive.
Distortion is rated at less than 0.1% referenced to 80 dB white noise, a figure that suggests the new driver stays composed when you push it. And at 328 grams, the AEON CORE keeps things light for a planar, which matters when you’re settling in for a long listening session rather than a quick demo.
- Type: Closed-back planar magnetic
- Impedance: 17 ohms
- Sensitivity: ~97 dB/mW
- Distortion: <0.1% (ref. 80 dB white noise)
- Weight: 328 grams
- Drive requirement: 125 mW into 16 ohms minimum
The pitch here is about flexibility as much as fidelity. A closed-back design means isolation for noisy rooms, shared spaces or anywhere you’d rather not bleed sound. Pair that with a sensitivity and power profile that plays nicely with small amps, and you get a headphone that fits a desk, a couch or a backpack without much fuss.
The AEON CORE began shipping on June 14 and is available now at US $899.99. That places it in genuinely competitive territory for a planar magnetic flagship — especially one promising the kind of soundstage that usually comes with an open back and all the leakage that entails. If DCA’s engineering delivers on the spacious claim without sacrificing the isolation that makes closed-backs worthwhile, the AEON CORE could be one of the more interesting headphones of the year.