

🎶 Elevate your sound game — precision, comfort, and durability in one sleek package.
The beyerdynamic DT 700 PRO X are closed-back studio headphones featuring 45mm Stellar.45 dynamic drivers optimized for audiophile listening and professional monitoring. With a robust German build, detachable cables, and a comfortable memory-foam headband with velour ear pads, they deliver exceptional sound isolation and clarity across all playback devices. Ideal for long studio sessions, these headphones combine durability, versatility, and premium audio fidelity for discerning professionals.





| ASIN | B09G75RWN2 |
| Additional Features | 2 Different Cables Included, Adjustable Headband, Lightweight, Noise Isolation, Removeable Cable |
| Age Range Description | All |
| Antenna Location | Recording |
| Audio Driver Size | 45 Millimeters |
| Audio Driver Type | Dynamic Driver |
| Best Sellers Rank | #1,212 in Musical Instruments ( See Top 100 in Musical Instruments ) #11 in Recording Headphone Audio Monitors |
| Brand Name | beyerdynamic |
| Built-In Media | 1/4" Adapter Installed, 5.9 Foot Removable Cable, 9.8 Removeable Cable, Drawstring Bag, Headphones |
| Cable Features | Detachable |
| Carrying Case Color | Black |
| Carrying Case Weight | 50 Grams |
| Color | Black with Grey |
| Compatible Devices | Devices with a 3.5 mm audio jack or a 6.35 mm adapter |
| Connectivity Technology | Wired |
| Control Method | Touch |
| Control Type | Volume Control |
| Customer Package Type | Rigid and Cushioned Package |
| Customer Reviews | 4.5 4.5 out of 5 stars (2,722) |
| Earpiece Shape | Over-ear |
| Enclosure Material | Plastic, Spring Steel, Velour |
| Frequency Range | 5 - 40,000 Hz |
| Frequency Response | 40000 Hz |
| Global Trade Identification Number | 04010118737701 |
| Headphone Folding Features | Over Ear |
| Headphone Jack | 3.5 mm Jack |
| Headphones Ear Placement | Over Ear |
| Impedance | 48 Ohms |
| Is Autographed | No |
| Item Weight | 16 ounces |
| Manufacturer | beyerdynamic |
| Model Name | DT 700 PRO X |
| Model Number | beyerdynamic |
| Noise Control | Sound Isolation |
| Number of Items | 1 |
| Sensitivity | 100 dB |
| Series Number | 2 |
| Specific Uses For Product | Entertainment, Gaming, Professional |
| Style Name | DT 700 PRO X Closed-Back Studio Headphones |
| Theme | HEADPHONES |
| Unit Count | 1.00 Count |
| Warranty Description | 2 year manufacturer |
| Water Resistance Level | Not Water Resistant |
| Wireless Technology | Wired studio headphones |
Z**Z
Excellent isolation, detailed sound, and built to last
The DT 700 Pro X really impressed me, especially with how well the closed-back design isolates sound. It blocks out a lot of outside noise, which makes it great for focused listening or working in less-than-quiet environments. Sound-wise, the detail is excellent. You can pick up subtle elements in tracks that are easy to miss on other headphones. The bass is strong and clean. not muddy or overpowering, just pretty controlled and present. I did tweak the EQ slightly to better match my personal preference and get an even more accurate response, but honestly, they sound great out of the box. They’re also very comfortable for long sessions and feel solid. I’ve dropped them a few times already and they’re still holding up perfectly, so build quality is definitely there. Overall, easy 5 stars. Great isolation, detailed sound, solid bass, and built to last.
F**S
Beyerdynamic has fixed my quibbles with their past headphones!
I got to say that I really like the general aesthetics and fit of Beyerdynamic headphones. What I didn't like about them in the past was their lack of detachable cables and the very bright tuning. I'm glad to say that Beyerdynamic has fixed both of those issues with the DT Pro X headphones. The cups are deep enough that my ears do not touch the surface of the drivers inside. One thing to be aware of, if you're not used to headphones with a lot of clamp pressure, this pair can feel overly clampy. It took me about a week to get used to it. Some people will argue that an oval shaped earcups are better but I really like the round ones. As long as your ears will completely fit inside, I find them very comfortable. With the round earcups, I find more flexibility in placing the headband on top of my head without affecting the fit. When worn for hours on end, I find most headphones will start creating a hotspot on the top of my head. I need to adjust where the headband lands on my head by rotating the earcups around my ears. With oval earcups, this will obviously affect the fit and seal. Round earcups do not have this issue for me. Comparing the DT900 Pro X to the DT700 Pro X, the 700 definitely has more bass but the 900 has a more open sound. I bought both not necessarily because of their differences in sound quality. I bought both because I have different needs regarding sound isolation. I typically prefer open back headphones but in a shared home office, there are plenty of times I really wish I had a closed back pair for when I really need to block out noise. Having said that, I'm finding that I'm really preferring the 700 for casual listening because of the bass. I'm not a bass head and I generally really prefer a flat sound profile but the bass on the 700 just sound so good. It is tight and not boomy. That's not to say that the 900 is lacking in bass though as the bass on the 900 is quite good as well. I've been using the Shure SRH1840 for the past 10 years. It was never really my first choice but at the time it was the only one I could find that checked all the boxes for me. In comparing the headphones, The 1840 have a much more open feel than the 900. As such, I feel that the sound stage of the 1840 is a bit wider. Personally though, I prefer the closer sound stage of the 900. Where the 1840 really lacks is the bass and mids. Compared to the 900, the vocals on the 1840 sounds very recessed. For the price those Shure headphones are going for, I don't really see them worth it especially when the DT Pro X's are available for much cheaper. I paid $700 for my SRH1840 back in 2013 and I knew it was overpriced then, but again, it was a pair that checked all most of the boxes for me (mainly comfort and build), minus the sound quality. Speaking of build, the SRH1840 is still going strong. I have replaced the earpads 2 times and the cable I think 1 time. The headband is really worn out but Shure sells them for $36 the last time I asked them. The metal grill though has started to show some paint wear and slight rusting on the edges. Overall, I'm very happy with the DT Pro X headphones. Both the 700 and 900 are very good with different use case for each. For easy listening or monitoring, I'd recommend the 700, but for a more neutral sound signature for mixing and editing, the 900 is better for sure. *Update October 14, 2024:* Just a year of constant use, the leatherette wrapping the foam in the headband has started to come undone on the 700 Pro X. The 700 Pro X is the one I use regularly. The 900 Pro X that I use in my sim racing rig is still ok. I will still give these headphones 5 stars as they've really been pretty much perfect for the one year that I've had them so far. I bought headphone headband wraps and used it to hold the foam in place. When I bought these headphones last year, I was expecting this to be an issue. Some people have said that Beyerdynamic has fixed it by using a different glue but I knew that would be almost impossible short of a redesign. I just wished the headbands on these headphones came with wrap style cover from the factory. They look better, more comfortable, and lasts much longer than the current design. *Update October 21, 2024:* I decided to contact Beyerdynamic about the replaceable foam headband that came apart in my DT700 Pro X. I also told them that I would eventually need one for my DT900 Pro X as well. The very next day after the email, I received a notification that an order has shipped. Today, I received the new headband foams. I attached a photo and you can see the improvement they made with the new one. The old one on the left and the new on the right. The issue with the old one is that the leatherette will eventually come unglued (from my experience and from what I read from other people, it's usually a year of constant use). Once it starts, it's very difficult to put back and almost impossible to glue it back and make it look tidy. Super glue do not hold on to the plastic material of the headband. The only option is replacement. I'm really glad that they fixed the issue by overlapping the leatherette so much more where it glues on to the plastic. The warranty service is also exceptional.
F**O
Studio grade headset is great for gaming.
They sound AMAZING, they're like studio-grade, I can use it 12 hours a day without problems, although they're a little bit heavy. They're the cheaper option for gaming with the ONLY bad side that's having a cord, but it's quite long so it doesn't really matter. The volume range is abysmal, but never dangerous, and the cord connection is jack, not USB (take this into consideration) the jack is a 3.5mm inside a 6.35mm cap, both completely usable.
A**R
One of the best under $500
The DT 700 Pro X (700 going forward) is an excellent headphone in the under $500 category. You're getting excellent build quality, comfort, and sound quality that's easy to drive and attractive. The 700 has a fairly neutral tonality overall, which is to be expected for a set geared towards music production. But that doesn't mean they're lean or boring sounding. You get excellent bass extension and slam, and an overall punchy and nimble bass presentation. Highs have good air and extension but don't get sibilant. Mids have good presence, though I'd prefer them to be a touch more forward. Soundstage is very good, with good side to side and dimensional placement of the instruments. Separation is good as well, allowing good identification of different conflicting or overlapping frequencies. Overall resolution is good, but not great. I didn't feel I was missing anything, but at the same time other headphones better resolve and isolate sounds for inspection. But the differences aren't major, IMO. Being low impedance, the 700 is very easy to power. They scale a bit with good amplification, but it's not absolutely necessary, unless you're chasing maximum sound quality. And they're as easy to wear as they are to power. These are some comfy headphones! The velour material is even softer and more supple than the older DT 770/880/990 pads, which were mighty comfy on their own. Clamping force is a bit high out of the box but dissipates after a week or so of use. If you're really bothered by it, when you get them, leave them clamped onto a shoebox or something slightly wider than your head at night for a week or two. That will help break in the metal headband tension, and ease the clamp force. Overall the 700 is a very well balanced sounding headphone in an easy to drive and wear package. Nothing stands out as offensive, which is excellent. Headphones usually have something sonically that stands out negatively, but these don't. They're not perfect, and might not match your preferences well, but I don't perceive any major frequency response flaws. In comparison the older DT 770 is brighter, more sibilant, with much more recessed mids, and boomy bass. All notable flaws, IMO. There's strong competition in this market segment though. The two headphones that stand out to me are the Austrian Audio Hi-X15 and the AKG K371. Both are significantly cheaper and rival the 700 in sound quality. Let's compare, shall we? Austrian Audio Hi-X15 - Tuning is a bit brighter, with a leaner presentation overall. The X15 is slightly more resolving, with a more dynamic response. Bass has more potential extension, and seems more responsive under duress. Treble and upper mids can be a bit intense at times though, especially right out of the box. The X15 needs a good 20-50 hours of run time to settle down. The driver is a high excursion type with a stiff suspension that IMO needs some hours to hit it's optimum operational range. I thought they were pretty bad the first 5 hours or so, but now they're a staple in my lineup. In comparison, the DT 700 Pro X is a bit darker, or less lean, if you will. Upper range extension and presence is more tame. Bass is slower and less nimble and responsive. Overall resolution is a bit less. The 700 sounds SLIGHTLY hazy in comparison. Also the X15 has more dynamic range, it can reproduce more nuance between high and low volume elements within the playback. But these differences are not huge, mind you. Do I feel I'm missing anything with the 700? Nope. I do prefer the slightly more punchy, though leaner X15 bass response, but the 700 doesn't disappoint. AKG K371 - Tuning is very similar, with a nice even frequency response top to bottom. Like the 700, nothing about the 371's response stands out as problematic. So why spend more for the 700 over the 371? The 700 is built much better, is more comfy, and is clearer and more resolving than the 371. Bass on the 371 can get a touch boomy and indistinct compared to the 700. Also the overall sound from the 371 is slightly hazier than the 700. I think of the 371 as the poor man's 700. Very very similar overall, with the 700 just being a bit better. If you twisted my arm and made me pick only one of the three, I'd take the 700 as it's the most even sounding of the bunch. I like the X15's higher dynamic range, it's quite impressive in such an affordable headphone, but the lean tuning is a bit annoying to me. Beyerdynamic hit it out of the park with the DT 700 Pro X. As a longtime fan it's good to see such a great legacy company as Beyer revamp their sound to more modern standards, and do it so well. For fans like myself who soured on the older lineup with their fatiguing brightness, the 700 is a breath of fresh air.
G**O
Excellent sound profile
C**N
El producto cumple perfectamente por el precio, unos audífonos de 48 homs generan gran versatibilidad para utilizar en casi cualquier reproductor de audio que tenga salida auxiliar, incluye 2 cables uno corto y uno largo. Construcción: Físicamente es en su mayoría plástico pero de muy buena calidad lo que significa que resistirá muchos años. Sonido: excelente, es muy divertido para escuchar música, muy buen bajo ( sin exagerar ) agudos muy agradables, y la separación de sonido es muy limpia. PC Gaming: otro motivo por el cual me decidí por estos es porque leí muy buenas reseñas, pasé de utilizar unos audífonos HD 600 a estos, y en gaming los Dt 900 pro X se lo llevan de calle para juegos tipo FPS, es muy fácil distinguir si un enemigo viene por izquierda, derecha, enfrente, atrás, arriba, abajo, pero no solo eso, espacialmente puedes ubicarlos perfectamente gracias al soundstage y el Imaging que ofrece, 10-10 para jugar. Antes probé unos Astro A40 TR y estos a pesar de tener un soundstage más amplio, estos tienen mal Imaging ( sabes que viene el enemigo pero no puedes tener un buen nivel de posicionamiento como el que ofrecen los DT 900 pro X) los astro en calidad auditiva ni comparar no son rival. Resumen: los DT 900 pro X, cumplen Perfectamente a mi gusto lo que vale, obtienes un producto de buena calidad, buenos materiales, comodidad, y lo recomendaría para personas no tan exigentes en audio pero tampoco a los que quieren quedarse en lo básico.
J**T
Geweldige hoofdtelefoon. Goed geluid, schitterend design. Alles voelt premium aan van verpakking tot aan hoofdtelefoon.
渡**夫
私は、モニターヘッドホンをリスニング用として使用して音楽を楽しむのが大好きでして、ベイヤーダイナミックDT700ProXを実際購入してみて、めっちゃ良かった。外国YouTube動画を字幕で観ていて、レビュアー達が、「正しい」とか「正しい音」と、こぞって表現していたので、どんなものかと思い購入しました。ふわふわのPadも、イイ!何が良いかって、レザーPadの様な変な反射音がない事。音分離が際立ちます。毛布みたいな、ふわふわなPadなので耳にも優しい。ベイヤーダイナミックDT700ProX実際の音の印象は、まず、音が綺麗。でヴォーカルも、歯切れ良く聞こえますし、伴奏がヴォーカルのほんのわずか前側で鳴って、曲全体的にリスニング用途だと、バランス良く聞こえ最高です。特に素晴らしいのは、ドラムとベースの音が誇張してなくて、ドラムやベースらしい、しっかりとした音がします。ベイヤーダイナミックが現在の音楽に合わせ開発したモニターヘッドホンだけあって、楽器の音数が多彩なAdoさんの楽曲とかは、ベイヤーダイナミックDT700ProXは、得意みたいですね。モニターでも、リスニングでも楽しめるヘッドホンだと思います。
C**N
Sono audiofilo e so quello che dico. Consiglio queste cuffie. Restituiscono quello che viene dato loro in pasto, nel bene e nel male. Non mi dilungo su specifiche tecniche o curve di risposta in frequenza, trovate ogni analisi di questo tipo su web. Sono equilibrate, cristalline, i bassi ci sono eccome, e sono dove devono stare. belli e leggibili, la sotto dove li ha messi il tecnico del suono, senza inquinare il resto della gamma dove si dipana il grosso del programma sonoro. Spietate perchè vanno trattate bene, date loro sorgenti e musica di scarsa qualità ed avrete una resa crudele, specialmente con la musica mainstream moderna, che viene prodotta per far suonare cuffie da 10/15€, scatolotti bluetooth o direttamente dagli smartphone, oggetti ai quali mancano Timbrica, Gamma Dinamica ed Estensione in frequenza - Quindi le varie playlist di SanRemo o le hit di Taylor Swift vengono mixate e masterizzate dai produttori pensando a questo utilizzo, e con queste cuffie risultano inascoltabili. (come succede peraltro con tutti gli oggetti veramente HiFi) Date loro musica prodotta con qualità e sarete felici. è poi vero che data la bassa impedenza sono facili da pilotare da smartphone o uscita jack del PC ma non fatelo, per esaltarle dotatevi di un ampli cuffie dedicato, anche entry level, non serve svenarsi.
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