Bose stopped making the Sleepbuds a while back, and if you ever tried a pair you know why people still search for them. Tiny in-ear buds that played masking sounds all night and actually stayed put. The good news is the idea didn’t die with them. A few of the original Bose engineers went off and built the Ozlo Sleepbuds, and a whole category of cheaper sleep headphones has filled in around it. Here are five you can actually order today, from a near-direct replacement down to a headband that costs less than a pizza. One thing to set expectations: most of these are about blocking noise and playing calm sounds, not audiophile music, so judge them on comfort and quiet first.
| Product | Type | Price | Best for |
| Ozlo Sleepbuds | In-ear buds | $249 | Closest Bose replacement |
| Soundcore Sleep A20 | In-ear buds | $120 | Streaming + noise block |
| MUSICOZY Headband | Headband | $19 | Budget all-rounder |
| LC-dolida Audio Mask | Audio eye mask | $26 | Light blocking too |
| Perytong Headband | Headband | $16 | Side sleepers |
1
Ozlo Sleepbuds
The closest thing to the old Bose buds, because it basically is
3.5(1,800+ reviews)
Ex-Bose teamMasking sounds
If you specifically miss the Bose Sleepbuds, this is the pair to get. Ozlo was started by engineers who worked on the original Bose product, and it shows in the tiny fit and the library of masking sounds that fade in when noise picks up. It’s not cheap at $249 and the reviews are mixed, mostly around app quirks and the buds needing a snug fit to seal. But nothing else here replicates that in-ear, streams-calming-sounds-all-night experience as closely. We dug into it more in our full
Ozlo Sleepbuds review.
2
Soundcore Sleep A20
Best in-ear value, and you can actually stream music
3.5(280+ reviews)
Streams audio14h batteryTwistlock fit
Anker’s take splits the difference. Unlike the Bose approach, the A20 pairs over Bluetooth so you can play your own podcasts or music, and it also has a bank of built-in sleep sounds if you’d rather not. Battery is the standout, around 14 hours on the buds alone and a lot more with the case. The catch is fit. The twistlock wings work great for some ears and feel fiddly for others, so give yourself a few nights to dial it in. For most people who don’t want to spend $249, this is the smart middle pick.
3
MUSICOZY Sleep Headphones Headband
The budget all-rounder with a huge fan base
4.2(33,600+ reviews)
Under $2033k+ reviews
If in-ear buds bug you, a headband is the move, and the MUSICOZY is the one most people land on. Flat speakers sit inside a soft stretchy band, so there’s nothing jammed in your ear canal and it doubles as a light eye cover. The pull-out speakers are washable, battery goes about ten hours, and at under twenty bucks it’s an easy thing to try. Sound quality is fine, not great, but for white noise and audiobooks it does the job. With 33,000-plus reviews it’s the safe budget bet.
4
LC-dolida 3D Sleep Mask with Bluetooth
Best if you want to block sound and light together
4.3(27,500+ reviews)
Blocks light3D eye cups
This one solves two problems at once. It’s a contoured blackout mask with thin speakers built into the sides, so you get darkness and audio without wearing a separate eye mask and earbuds. The 3D molded cups leave room for your eyes, which side and stomach sleepers appreciate. Bass is basically nonexistent, so don’t buy it for music, buy it for blocking a bright room plus playing rain sounds. For travel or a partner who keeps the TV on, it’s a clever pick.
5
Perytong Sleep Headphones
Cheapest of the bunch and the best for side sleepers
4.2(51,200+ reviews)
Under $16Thin for side sleep
The Perytong is basically the MUSICOZY’s thinner, cheaper cousin, and with over 50,000 reviews it’s arguably the most popular sleep headband on Amazon. The band is flatter, which is the whole reason side sleepers love it, since the speakers don’t press into your ear against the pillow. Its a sportier build so some people use it for workouts too. At around $16 it’s the one to grab if you just want to test whether a headband works for you before spending more.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why did Bose stop selling the Sleepbuds?
Bose pulled the Sleepbuds line a few years back and hasn’t brought it back. The closest continuation is the Ozlo Sleepbuds, built by some of the same engineers, which is why it tops this list for anyone chasing that exact experience.
Do any of these play white noise without your phone?
Yes. The Ozlo Sleepbuds and Soundcore Sleep A20 both have onboard sleep sounds that run without streaming from your phone. The headbands and the LC-dolida mask rely on Bluetooth, so those need your phone or a small player nearby to pipe in audio.
Which is best for side sleepers?
A flat headband like the Perytong, or the LC-dolida audio mask. Both keep hard speakers from digging into your ear when your head is on the pillow. In-ear buds can work for side sleepers too if the fit is right, but they’re hit or miss.
Can I use these just to block snoring?
To a point. None of these fully cancel a loud snorer the way active noise cancelling headphones might, but playing steady white noise or rain over the top masks a lot of it. The in-ear pairs seal better and block more than the headbands do.
Still deciding on a format? Our sleep headphones buyer’s guide breaks down buds vs headbands vs audio masks, and if you sleep on your side, check the best sleep headphones for side sleepers.
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