Price and Availability
At ₹3,999, and often even lower with launch offers, these land right in the most competitive part of the market. This is typically where brands cut corners, but OnePlus is taking a different route by bringing features down from its flagship lineup instead of stripping things away. It makes you question whether “Pro” here is just branding, or something that actually translates into the experience.
Design and Build
The first thing you notice is how much cleaner this feels compared to before. The case is compact with a slightly squarish design, smaller than the last generation, and the matte finish keeps fingerprints in check. The earbuds are lightweight, comfortable, and sit securely, whether you’re commuting or working out. The build feels solid, magnets are strong, and the IP55 rating means sweat or light rain won’t be a concern. Features like wear detection and slide gestures for volume feel genuinely useful rather than added for the sake of it. Overall, this is a practical design that focuses on everyday usability.
The case is compact with a slightly squarish design.
Connectivity and App
Connectivity is smooth and reliable, with Bluetooth 6.0, dual device pairing, and support for Fast Pair and Swift Pair making switching between devices seamless. There’s low latency for gaming, customizable gesture controls, and even AI translation on supported devices. The companion app experience adds to the flexibility, letting you tweak controls and audio settings without overcomplicating things.
That said, it also feels like we’ve reached a point where a “find my buds” feature should be standard across the board. Even if it’s not something as advanced as what you get on the Apple AirPods with long-range tracking, something as simple as a nearby buzz or ping feature would go a long way in day-to-day use. It’s a small addition, but one that makes a big difference.
This is our general feedback for buds who belong to a brand which does have the advantage of a connected ecosystem.
Audio Performance
The OnePlus Nord Buds 4 Pro come with 12mm drivers and a sound profile that leans towards bass. The output is loud and punchy, and there’s a noticeable thump even without any boost. Vocals are clear, highs are handled well enough, but the mids can feel slightly recessed at times.
In our usage, especially at the gym, we tried everything from podcasts to music. While podcasts aren’t necessarily the strongest use case for these earbuds and the tuning doesn’t always flatter spoken content, they really come into their own with music. Across genres, the sound feels energetic and engaging, which is exactly what most people will want in this segment.There’s also enough room to customise, with LHDC 5.0 support, EQ options, and spatial audio adding flexibility. Active Noise Cancellation goes up to 55dB, and the difference is noticeable, especially outdoors. It’s not flagship-level, but it performs well for the price. Call quality holds up too, with a three-mic setup on each earbud and AI noise reduction doing a decent job even in less-than-ideal conditions.
Battery life is one of the highlights here, delivering around 7 to 8 hours with ANC on and up to 54 hours in total with the case. Fast charging also helps, with a quick 10-minute charge giving you close to 13 hours of playback.
Verdict
The OnePlus Nord Buds 4 Pro aren’t trying to be perfect, and that’s exactly why they work. The mids could be better and the ANC isn’t class-leading, but at this price, that’s expected. What you do get is strong noise cancellation, excellent battery life, a feature-packed experience, and solid everyday performance.
This is what it looks like when “premium” starts becoming the baseline. And for most people, this is more than enough.


