Every wireless earbud lists a string of codec names. Most of it only matters under specific conditions. Here is what to know.
The codec is a handshake
A codec compresses audio to send it over Bluetooth. Both your phone and your earbuds have to support the same one, or they fall back to a lower common option. So a phone with no LDAC plus LDAC earbuds equals no LDAC.
The main players
- SBC is the universal baseline. Always works, lowest quality.
- AAC is the default on Apple devices and sounds good on them. On Android it can be inconsistent.
- aptX / aptX Adaptive is common on Android and Qualcomm phones, with low latency.
- LDAC is Sony's high-bitrate codec, the closest to hi-res over Bluetooth, at the cost of battery and a stable connection.
Does it actually matter?
For podcasts and casual listening, no. For critical music listening on capable gear, a higher-bitrate codec can add a little detail and headroom. But fit and tuning matter more than the codec almost every time. A great-sounding earbud on AAC beats a mediocre one on LDAC.
Practical advice
Match your gear: if you have a Sony or Android phone, LDAC or aptX earbuds make sense. If you live on an iPhone, optimize for AAC and stop worrying about the rest. Either way, get the fit right first.