Samsung appears ready to pinch a slice of the fast-growing clip-on earbud market. References to a device called the Galaxy Buds Able have surfaced inside Samsung’s own Wearable app, giving us the first solid hint that the company is preparing an open-ear model to sit alongside its more conventional in-ear lineup.
The clip-on format is having a moment. Instead of sealing inside your ear canal like a traditional bud, these hook onto the outer edge of the ear, leaving your ear canal open to the world. The trade-off is obvious: you sacrifice some isolation and bass in exchange for staying aware of your surroundings — handy for runners, cyclists and anyone who doesn’t fancy being oblivious to oncoming traffic.
According to the app sighting, Samsung’s take carries the open-ear, clip-on design you’d expect from the category. There’s also chatter that the hardware could lean on bone conduction technology, transmitting sound as vibrations rather than pumping it directly into the ear. If accurate, that would set the Buds Able apart from many rivals that simply park a speaker near the ear opening.
One wrinkle worth flagging: the name may not stick. Some reports suggest the final retail badge could end up being Galaxy Buds On, so treat “Able” as a working title for now.
On price, nothing is official, but the most defensible estimate lands somewhere in the US$200 to US$230 range — slotting the Buds Able neatly between the Galaxy Buds 4 and the Galaxy Buds 4 Pro. That positioning would make sense for a premium-but-not-flagship accessory aimed at active users.
Timing is where things get murky. Samsung’s next Galaxy Unpacked event takes place in London on July 22, 2026, and it would be the natural stage for a clip-on debut. Yet the signals are conflicting: while some sources tie the Buds Able to that showcase, others suggest the earbuds won’t actually appear there. In other words, don’t be surprised if this one arrives via a quieter launch rather than the big keynote spotlight.
What’s clear is the competitive picture. The open-ear space is crowded, with plenty of established players already offering clip-on and bone-conduction alternatives. Samsung entering the fray with the weight of the Galaxy ecosystem behind it — seamless pairing with Galaxy phones, watches and tablets — could be the differentiator that pulls buyers away from smaller specialists.
For now, everything beyond the app listing remains unconfirmed. No full specification sheet, no locked-in price and no official launch date have been verified. But the appearance inside Samsung’s Wearable app is about as concrete a breadcrumb as we get before an official reveal, and it strongly suggests the Galaxy audio family is about to get a more open-minded new member.