The Bluetooth Special Interest Group unveiled version 6.0 of the wireless standard in September 2024, promising better reliability, security, and efficiency for devices like headphones and phones. Key upgrades include reduced latency and improved location tracking, though lossless audio remains out of reach. Early compatible devices from Apple, Google, and others are now available.
The announcement of Bluetooth 6.0 marks a significant evolution in wireless technology, focusing on smoother audio experiences and smarter device interactions. Released in September 2024 by the Bluetooth Special Interest Group, the standard introduces features aimed at addressing longstanding limitations in latency, power use, and pairing processes.
One standout improvement is the isochronous adaptive layer (ISOAL), which divides audio data into smaller packets for faster processing. This could lower latency from the typical 50 to 100 milliseconds in Bluetooth 5.x devices to under 10 milliseconds in ideal conditions, or around 20 milliseconds in everyday use. Such reductions would make video playback and gaming less prone to audio lag, benefiting wireless headphones and earbuds.
Channel Sounding emerges as another key feature, enhancing location accuracy to about 10 centimeters through timestamped data exchanges and frequency analysis, surpassing older signal-strength methods. This bolsters services like Apple's Find My network and equivalents from Google and Samsung, while adding security layers for Bluetooth-enabled locks via encryption and location verification.
Efficiency gains come from adaptive power management, which ramps up energy for sync-intensive tasks like gaming but conserves it for simpler audio playback, vital for battery-constrained earbuds. Pairing also gets a boost with advertiser filtering that monitors previously connected devices, enabling quicker reconnections and multipoint switching without constant scanning.
Despite these advances, Bluetooth 6.0 falls short on delivering reliable wireless lossless audio, as bandwidth overhead limits effective throughput below the 1.4 Mbps needed for CD-quality sound. An optional LC3plus codec supports up to 24-bit, 96kHz audio but requires separate licensing, likely curbing its uptake. A forthcoming revision may enable higher speeds of up to 7.5 Mbps, potentially paving the way for lossless streaming, though widespread adoption remains uncertain.
Devices supporting Bluetooth 6.0 include the Google Pixel 10, iPhone 17, Sony Xperia 1 VII, Xiaomi 16, Edifier Doo Ace 2 headphones, and Earfun Air Pro 4 Plus earbuds, with some not yet available in the US.