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TechRadar
TechRadar
Becky Scarrott

How to clean your earbuds

An earbuds being cleaned with a cotton swab, on beige background
Tools & requirements

- Microfiber cloth

- Soft-bristled brush or small silicone pastry brush

- Compressed air 

- Cotton bud

- 70% isopropyl alcohol (aka rubbing alcohol, optional) 

Worried about keeping your handy and oh-so-pocketable earbuds clean? It's a good concern to have; the things sit in your outer ear canal, after all. The best true wireless earbuds are designed to come with you everywhere, but public places such as the gym, the subway and even your office hot-desk have all proved prime locations for gathering dirt. 

If you’ve recently noticed that your earbuds aren't sounding as clear, neutral and detailed as you remember, won't charge properly or even seem susceptible to crackling or disconnecting, grubbiness could be to blame. 

If your earbuds' mesh and grilles are exposed in an open-earbud design (like Apple's 2019 AirPods, the original wired EarPods or the 'buds squirrelled away in the back of the Nokia 5710 XpressAudio) those little crevices collect dust and general grime like you wouldn't believe – even the very best noise-cancelling earbuds aren't immune here – and in this article, we walk you through the best ways to clean your earbuds and their case. 

Quick steps for how to clean your earbuds

  • Remove your earbuds from their case, remove any ear tips and use a clean, dry, soft-bristled brush to remove dust and debris from the mesh speaker (or microphone) grilles
  • Clean the exterior of the case with a soft, lint-free microfiber cloth – you should not need any cleaning agents or water
  • Open the case and direct a quick blast of compressed air over the charging points to dislodge dust that could be affecting their charging efficacy

Step-by-step guide for how to clean your earbuds

Fancy watching this information, as well as reading it? TechRadar’s US Editor in Chief, Lance Ulanoff, recently appeared on US morning show Live with Kelly and Ryan to talk viewers through the best ways to spring-clean their tech. Skip to the 2:03 mark of the video (embedded below), where Lance explains how to clean your earbuds quickly and efficiently if you're strapped for time. 

If you’ve got a bit of a gap in your schedule right now though – or your buds are just really really dirty – read on for some alternative, in-depth methods and tips for cleaning your earbuds.  

1. Take the earbuds out of their case and remove the ear tips

First things first: get the things out and remove the ear tips. It might seem too obvious to mention, but you won't be using any pointed sharp objects here – piercing fine speaker mesh would not be a good idea. 

If your ear tips are silicon, washing them in a solution made up of 5ml liquid dish soap and 250ml warm water will work wonders. Just try to keep that away from your driver-filled earpieces and their case, even those boasting a healthy IP rating. 

2. Really gunky 'buds? Grab a cotton swab moistened with 70% isopropyl alcohol

That's rubbing alcohol to you and me. Now, liquids and electronics don't mix, so tread very carefully here – you don't want any moisture going beyond the grilles and into the drivers – but if there's a bunch of gunk on your earbuds (it's ear wax; that's perfectly natural) a Q-Tip is a tool specifically designed to help. 

Your earbuds' speaker grilles, mic outlets and charging points are about the size of a grain of rice, remember, so dragging a cotton swab over the area you want to clean will not be a lengthy job. Fiddly, yes; lengthy, no. 

3. Use a soft-bristled brush or small silicone pastry brush over the grilles

The key to this is that it's clean, dry, and hasn't been used for applying egg-wash any time recently. 

Don't have a pastry brush at home? A soft-bristled manual toothbrush or toothbrush head (if you've gone electric) will also do the job – just don't use your current one. Or your partner's. 

Working the brush around the grilles in little circular motions, after the rubbing alcohol trick, should remove even the most stubborn globs of wax. 

4. Blow compressed air into the case, over the charging ports

If you’ve got either a canister of compressed air or a silicone air blower at your disposal (and if you don't, you can pick that last item up on Amazon for just a few dollars), use this tool to blow compressed air over the charging ports of each earbud. 

If using a canister of compressed air, think short, sharp blast of no more than a second or two. 

5. Take a microfiber cloth to the case – and rub

This step is self explanatory, really. You shouldn't need any water or potentially abrasive cleaning agent unless they're stained (and AirPods are white aren't they? So, it happens) but if you do think you need something more than just a cleaning cloth and a bit of effort to shift the dirt, dipping the cloth in the solution above (5ml liquid dish soap and 250ml warm water) and wiping the case carefully, taking particular care when it comes to the USB-C charging port, is your step-up option. 

6. Make sure the ear tips are dry before replacing

Leaving your ear tips to dry thoroughly (you can usually turn most silicon tips inside out, which helps) before fitting them again is best practice. Sure, most earbuds today come with an IP rating, but why test it? 

A quick once over with that soft microfiber towel when they're dry, et voila! Your earbuds should look and sound like new. 

Useful tips

(Image credit: Andrea Piacquadio)

It might seem tempting, but simply blowing into your wireless earbuds case in the hopes of dislodging whatever's in there would be a bad idea. It's difficult for mere mortals to replicate the air pressure of a compressed air canister or a silicone air blower, you see, and human breath also contains too much moisture to be advisable. 

If there's a lot of ear wax on those little grilles, rubbing alcohol really is your friend since it dissolves wax pretty effectively given time. Leave a little on a moistened cotton bud, work it around the mesh, then wait. 

Look, if hardened wax is really clogged on there, we have seen people take a Swiss army knife to their earbuds to sort of delicately cleave it off, (and some AirPods cleaning kits feature quite the pointy-looking tool, don't they?) but this is not something we'd advise, unless you've the steady hand of a surgeon. 

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