If your Bluetooth headphones keep cutting out, the signal is usually weak or noisy. The environment can make a significant difference.
Quick steps to try first
- Forget the connection on both the headphones and the source device, then re-pair from the device's Bluetooth menu.
- Update the firmware on the headphones and the software on your source device.
- Reduce interference by turning off or moving away from other Bluetooth devices, Wi-Fi routers, microwaves, and cordless phones.
- Test in a different location (another room or outdoors) to see if the issue changes.
How to identify the cause
- Try a different source device: If dropouts improve, the original device or its software may be the issue. If dropouts remain, the headphones may need service.
- Try a different headset or speaker on the same source: If dropouts go away, the problem is with the original headphones. If dropouts remain, the source device or its settings may be the issue.
How the environment affects Bluetooth
Bluetooth uses the 2.4 GHz band. Signals travel through air but are affected by walls, metal, and objects.
- Inside buildings, signals can reflect off walls. Too many reflections or obstacles can cause dropouts.
- Outdoors, line of sight helps, but busy areas with many 2.4 GHz devices can cause interference.
- The body can weaken signals – a phone in a pocket or pressed against the body reduces range.
Practical tips
- Keep devices within a few meters and reduce barriers between them.
- Hold the phone higher or keep it in front, not in a pocket.
- Limit other wireless activity near your devices.
- Keep firmware and software up to date on both the headphones and source device.
- If a specific room has frequent dropouts, remove or turn off nearby wireless devices.