The Bang & Olufsen app is widely praised as polished, stable and genuinely useful, with EQ, stereo setup, battery readouts and extra content. One review noted a radio feature hiccup.
The JBL Portable app is generally straightforward and stable, but it is feature-light and required for key functions like Playtime Boost, stereo pairing, and deeper EQ control.
Compatibility is best within JBL’s newer Auracast ecosystem; reviewers note limitations pairing with older JBL PartyBoost models and that stereo requires a matching Clip 5.
Battery life is one of its best features. The 24-hour claim is repeatedly praised and several reviewers found real-world endurance strong or even conservative at moderate volume.
Battery life is commonly rated around 12 hours, with real-world tests near 11 to 11.5 hours at moderate volume; higher volume can cut that down, and Playtime Boost can extend runtime but thins bass.
AAC and aptX Adaptive support are appreciated, but Bluetooth 5.1 feels dated and the lack of Auracast comes up repeatedly as a missed opportunity.
Codec support is positioned as basic, with reviewers noting the lack of higher-bitrate Bluetooth codec options.
Bluetooth stability is a strong point, with reviewers reporting dependable pairing and no meaningful dropouts in normal use.
Connection stability is generally strong once paired, though one tester reported slow initial pairing with a phone before troubleshooting.
Bluetooth range is solid for normal portable use, roughly room-to-garden or around 10 meters, but nobody describes it as exceptional.
Bluetooth range is described as solid for typical portable use, holding up well when the source device is a reasonable distance away.
Charging takes around three hours, which is acceptable but commonly described as leisurely or on the long side.
Full charging is described around roughly 2.5 to 3 hours, with some reviewers noting there is no fast-charging focus.
Its presentation is repeatedly described as composed, unified and together-sounding, with strong musical organization.
Physical buttons are consistently described as clicky, positive and easy to use.
Buttons are generally described as firm, intuitive, and easy to press, including when hands are wet.
Design is the headline feature. Nearly every review describes the A1 3rd Gen as beautiful, premium, luxurious and unusually desirable for a portable speaker.
Design is seen as practical and more premium than earlier generations with lots of color options, but branding can feel bold and the shape does not stand upright easily.
Detail retrieval is a major strength. Reviews repeatedly praise how much vocal texture, instrument separation and fine nuance it extracts for such a small speaker.
Reviews consistently call out strong detail for the size, with clearer vocals and better instrument separation than prior models, while acknowledging mono playback limits spaciousness.
The A1 3rd Gen generally stays composed when pushed, with little change in character at high volume, though bass-heavy tracks and resonant surfaces can expose some strain or boom.
Most testers say it stays composed at high volume (often with little to no obvious distortion), though a few note treble can turn shrill or slight distortion can appear at extreme levels.
Build quality is excellent, but the aluminum finish can scuff and reviewers are less comfortable throwing it around than a rugged JBL-style speaker.
Build impressions are rugged, with thicker rubber feet or padding and a durable shell intended to handle everyday knocks and outdoor use.
With IP67 dust protection, reviewers treat it as outdoor-ready and well-suited to dusty or sandy environments.
It handles dynamic swings capably for a small portable, but several reviews say larger or cheaper rivals still sound more explosive.
EQ customization is one of the best parts of the experience. The preset system and visual sound control are intuitive, effective and unusually enjoyable to use.
The app provides EQ presets and a customizable multi-band EQ, which many find helpful, although at least one review felt preset changes were subtle.
Its tonal balance is warm, rich and polished rather than strictly neutral, with standout mids and vocals, controlled bass and smooth highs. Some listeners wanted more treble bite or deeper sub-bass.
The tuning is generally balanced with punchy bass and clear highs for the size, but deep bass is naturally limited and Playtime Boost reduces low-end weight noticeably.
The leather strap looks and feels premium and makes carrying or hanging the speaker easy.
The built-in carabiner-style clip is a standout feature, with a taller or wider opening than before and a robust feel that makes it easy to hang on bags, bikes, and fixtures.
Inter-speaker connectivity is a major upgrade via Auracast, enabling linking with other compatible speakers and stereo pairing with a second Clip 5.
Reviewers note low latency for typical phone video watching, though it is not positioned as a primary TV speaker.
It gets impressively loud for a compact speaker and can fill a room or hotel space, but it is not the brute-force outdoor party option and some reviewers wanted more outright volume for the price.
Across reviews, it gets impressively loud for a micro speaker and is easy to hear outdoors or over shower noise, but it can sound more crowded as you push toward maximum volume.
Stereo pairing is a genuine strength. Reviews say it is easy to set up and useful in practice, including pairing with a 2nd-gen A1 in several cases.
Auracast and stereo pairing are widely described as easy to use, but stereo pairing requires an identical second Clip 5 and some modes can reset EQ or stay mono.
Multipoint support is a real plus and reviewers found switching between two devices simple and reliable.
Several reviews report multipoint use (two devices connected) so two people can take turns controlling playback.
Sound disperses broadly and works well for room or table listening, though not every reviewer agrees it is truly 360-degree audio.
On-device controls are simple and mostly intuitive (volume, play/pause, pairing, Auracast), but some advanced features and configuration live in the app.
Pairing and setup are straightforward, helped by Fast Pair or Swift Pair support and a clean companion app.
Setup is typically quick and simple, with straightforward Bluetooth pairing; one review notes an occasional pairing hiccup that was resolved with a device restart.
Gen 3 drops Alexa entirely, which reduces smart-speaker appeal versus Gen 2, even if several reviewers said they did not miss it.
Speakerphone performance is generally good, with clear calls and solid voice pickup, though some reviewers heard slightly processed edges to voices.
Multiple sources state there is no microphone, so it cannot be used for calls or speakerphone features.
The status LEDs work, but they are fairly subtle, and a couple of reviewers wanted them larger or more obvious.
It uses simple LEDs for status (including low-battery warning), while the app can show a precise battery percentage.
Out of the box it plays in mono, so left-right separation is limited; true stereo requires a second Clip 5, and multi-speaker linking can remain mono depending on mode.
Sustainability stands out for the category thanks to repairability, a replaceable battery and Cradle to Cradle certification.
Charging is via USB-C and a cable is typically included, with the port dedicated to charging rather than audio input.
Value for money is the most debated part of the A1 3rd Gen. Many think the sound, materials and longevity justify the premium, but value-minded reviewers still see better sound-per-dollar from cheaper JBL and other larger rivals.
Most reviews view it as good value around the $80 price point (often discounted), though some competitors offer longer battery life or stronger EQ features for less.
Voices come through clearly for podcasts and talk content, even in noisy environments like a shower, and the app includes a vocal-focused EQ option.
Its IP67 rating is consistently treated as trustworthy for poolside, shower and beach use, and several reviewers mention quick dunk-style tests without issue.
It carries an IP67 rating and is repeatedly used in showers and near water without issues, including brief submersion scenarios described by reviewers.
It is portable enough for bags and travel, with reassuring heft, but it is not featherlight or pocket-sized.
It is lightweight and easy to carry, but it is slightly bulkier than earlier versions, making pockets less comfortable; the clip reduces the need to pocket-carry it.
USB-C works for both charging and wired audio, giving the A1 more flexibility than many Bluetooth-only rivals. USB-C wired playback is more than a checkbox feature. Reviews that tried it reported extra clarity, punch and definition compared with Bluetooth.
There is no 3.5mm AUX input and the USB-C port is for charging only, so wired playback is not supported.