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Blaupunkt BH71 Moksha review: Good sound, functional design

Blaupunkt BH71 Moksha focuses on clean sound output, effective noise cancellation, and a straightforward design that prioritises comfort, long listening sessions, and practical everyday usability without unnecessary complexity.

February 04, 2026 / 22:47 IST
BH71 Moksha
Snapshot AI
  • Blaupunkt BH71 Moksha offers spatial audio and head tracking at Rs 4999.
  • Comfortable design, strong ANC, and reliable battery life suit daily use.
  • Balanced sound tuning and low latency mode enhance calls, music, and gaming.

Wireless headphones today often promise big features — immersive sound, strong noise cancellation, long battery life — but few manage to balance all of them in everyday use. The Blaupunkt BH71 Moksha enters this crowded space with a focus on experience rather than raw specifications, introducing spatial audio and head tracking at a price point where such features are rarely found and it costs Rs 4999. After using it across work calls, travel, music sessions, movies, and gaming, the Moksha reveals itself not as a flashy gimmick-driven product, but as a headphone designed to quietly improve how you listen throughout the day.

Design and comfort

The Moksha keeps its design understated and functional. The matte finish avoids fingerprints, branding is minimal, and the overall shape prioritises wearability over visual drama. It doesn’t feel premium by itself, but also not cheap by any means. The build is good enough to withstand the test of time. Hinges move smoothly, earcups rotate naturally, and nothing creaks when folded repeatedly for travel.

Comfort is one of its strongest qualities in daily use. The protein leather cushions are soft without being overly plush, allowing them to sit comfortably around the ears rather than pressing against them. Clamping force stays balanced — secure enough for movement, but not tight enough to cause fatigue. During long movie sessions and extended work calls, I rarely felt the need to readjust, and heat build-up remained manageable.

The foldable structure turns out to be genuinely useful. It slips easily into backpacks and cabin bags, making it practical for commuting and flights rather than something you hesitate to carry.

Spatial audio and head tracking

This is where the BH71 Moksha separates itself from most headphones in this price bracket.

With spatial audio enabled, sound spreads beyond the typical left-right stereo bubble. Dialogue in movies feels anchored ahead, while ambient sounds stretch outward, creating a wider, more cinematic soundstage. It doesn’t exaggerate effects, but it adds depth that standard headphones simply don’t deliver and all of that without sounding hollow.

After using it for a while, switching back to regular stereo makes everything feel noticeably flatter and monotonous.

Head tracking adds another layer of realism. As you turn your head, the sound remains fixed in space, mimicking how audio behaves in real life. During action scenes, concerts, and gaming, this brings a sense of presence that feels closer to sitting in front of speakers rather than wearing headphones.

For music, the effect is more selective. Live performances and cinematic soundtracks benefit the most, while everyday playlists often feel more natural without it. It becomes a feature you enable when immersion matters rather than something you keep on permanently.

Noise cancellation and sound tuning

The hybrid ANC performs consistently in everyday environments. Constant noises like traffic hum, air conditioners, and office background chatter are reduced effectively, creating a calmer listening space. Sudden sharp sounds still pass through occasionally, but overall noise reduction is strong enough for commuting and travel.

What stands out is how comfortable the ANC feels over longer periods. There’s no heavy pressure sensation, which makes it easier to keep it enabled for hours during workdays or flights.

Sound tuning remains balanced and controlled. Bass is present but not overpowering, avoiding the boomy character many consumer headphones lean toward. Mids are clear, helping vocals, podcasts, and dialogue sound natural. Treble stays smooth without harsh peaks, making long listening sessions fatigue-free. It isn’t tuned for bass-heavy preferences, but for mixed daily use, it feels mature and easy to live with.

Calls, connectivity, and latency

The quad AI microphone system handles voice clarity well in real-world conditions. Whether walking on busy streets or sitting inside cafés, my voice came through clearly with background noise reduced noticeably. It isn’t studio-clean, but it’s reliable for work meetings and casual calls. I never faced a major complaint about background noise while taking calls using the headphone.

Bluetooth stability remained solid across phones and laptops with no random dropouts during testing.

Low latency mode makes a clear difference for gaming and video playback. Audio stays tightly synced with visuals, eliminating the slight delay many wireless headphones still suffer from. For mobile gaming especially, sound effects feel immediate rather than trailing behind the action.

Battery life

In daily use with ANC and spatial audio mixed in, the Moksha comfortably lasted for around 5 days before needing a recharge. It’s the kind of battery performance that fits naturally into routines rather than demanding constant attention.

Quick charging helps when you forget to plug it in overnight, delivering hours of playback from short top-ups.

Physical controls are intuitive and easy to locate by touch, whether adjusting volume, switching ANC modes, or enabling head tracking while on the move.

Verdict

The Blaupunkt BH71 Moksha succeeds not by relying on one standout feature, but by delivering a balanced everyday experience and some out of the box features. For instance, the Spatial audio adds depth without feeling gimmicky, ANC makes daily environments calmer, and long-session comfort remains consistently strong. Connectivity stays reliable across devices, while battery life fits easily into regular routines. The build prioritises durability over premium materials, bass lovers may want more punch, and spatial audio works best when used selectively. Still, none of these feel like deal breakers, especially at this price point.

If you have the question: Should you consider this? Then, the answer is yes, if you are looking for a good headphone for consuming content on OTTs, music and taking calls. But, if you are someone who loves extremely bassy output, then you might want to look somewhere else.

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Sarthak Singh Sarthak is an experienced writer having covered personal and consumer tech, gadgets news, social media trends, and more for several years
first published: Feb 4, 2026 10:46 pm

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