We Tested the Top 5 Motorcycle Earplugs Across 5 Weeks of Spring Riding. Here's the One We're Taking to the Dolomites.
Tinnitus is permanent. Hearing loss from wind noise is permanent. And the wind inside your helmet at highway speed is louder than a chainsaw at full power.
The first warm days of the year had arrived, and like every year that meant one thing for us: finally back on the bike. There are four of us, and we're currently planning our longer motorcycle tour of 2026 through the Dolomites.
Last year we did a similar tour - with one problem we honestly underestimated: missing or inadequate hearing protection. After several hours in the saddle, two of us had such intense ear pain and pressure from the wind that they had to cut the trip short. That's when it hit us: for long-distance riding, good earplugs aren't a nice-to-have. They're absolutely essential.
So we used the first warm weeks of this year and tested five different earplug brands made for motorcycling across multiple short rides. We cared about which ones you can still wear comfortably after hours under the helmet - no pressure, no wind howl, no fatigue. Here's what we found.
🏍️ Tested on real spring rides, not a lab
🛣️ 5 weeks, 4 riders, multiple routes, over 2,000 km
🎧 Hours-long riding with helmet, intercom, and glasses
🏆 One brand won it - and it's not the one your dealer sells
Most of us ride for the same reasons. The open road. The lean into a mountain pass. The quiet moment when the engine cuts and a valley opens below you.
But every time you accelerate past 100 km/h (60 mph), the wind noise inside your helmet passes 100 dB. That's above the threshold where hearing damage becomes cumulative. You don't feel it in the moment. You feel it at dinner, when you can't quite make out what your riding buddy is saying across the table. You feel it three years later, when the ringing in your ears never quite goes away.
Last year, after the aborted tour, two of us looked up the studies. McCombe's 1994 study of British riders found that after 8 years of regular riding without hearing protection, most riders develop some level of permanent hearing loss. MotoGP riders? They all wear earplugs. Custom-moulded, audiologist-fitted, weeks of fitting and waiting. All of them.
That tells you two things: the pros have known this for decades, and most amateurs ignore it until it's too late. We decided we weren't going to be those amateurs this season.
• Hears - Jet Black (hears.com · Amsterdam · 🏆 Award-winning earplug 2025) • Alpine - MotoSafe Pro (Netherlands · 30-year moto-specific veteran) • Auritech - Biker (UK · purpose-built UK biker brand with shaped attenuation) • Loop - Experience 2 (Belgium · the TikTok-famous filtered plug) • Flare Audio - Calmer Pro (UK · acoustic-resonance technology)
Alpine MotoSafe Pro was the expected favorite. Moto-specific, 30 years of development, the EU standard among serious riders for generations. Hears was the wildcard. Spoiler: the wildcard won.
Phase 1 - Short spring rides, April 2026
We used the first five weekends of March and April. Mostly short rides, 60 to 180 km round-trips. City exits, some autobahn, some country roads. Each of the four of us wore a different pair each ride, rotating through all five brands. The grading criteria were simple. Does the wind noise drop to a level you can ride without tensing up? Can you hear your intercom? Your GPS? The car behind you hitting the horn? Does the plug stay in when you pull your helmet off at a rest stop? And - this turned out to be the big one - at what hour does it start to hurt?
Alpine MotoSafe Pro was the gold standard on paper. Moto-specific. Rider-friendly stem. Filter tuned for wind frequencies. On the first rides, it did exactly what we expected: excellent wind reduction, engine rumble dropped immediately. The problem showed up at hour four. The stem, while designed for helmets, still pressed against the outer ear enough that two of us had discomfort we had to ignore. By hour six, the pressure was constant. Auritech Biker is less famous than Alpine on the continent but big in the UK biker scene. Their shaped-attenuation design is genuinely different - a flatter profile that sits deeper. Wind reduction was strong, close to Alpine. But the fit was finicky: two of our four testers couldn't get a reliable seal without refitting three times. When they fit, they fit well. When they don't, they whistle.
Loop Experience 2 was never designed for motorcycles. On the bike, it held up better than expected - quiet, comfortable, low profile sat fine under the helmet. But the filter isn't tuned for wind noise, so at highway speed the pressure sensation inside the ear canal was noticeable. For a 30-minute commute: fine. For a three-hour tour: not enough. Flare Audio Calmer Pro was the most interesting of the five. Flare's "reshape sound, don't block it" philosophy is genuinely different - and it preserves intercom and GPS audio better than anything else we tested. But for pure wind noise at highway speed, the Calmer Pro doesn't attenuate enough. You still feel the buffeting.
And then there was Hears. We tested both models - Hears Plus (25 dB SNR, higher attenuation) and Jet Black (20 dB, more balanced). Both impressed us, but the Jet Black was the right call for touring. On a pure highway blast, yes, Alpine MotoSafe attenuates slightly more dB. But on a mountain pass in traffic, during a stop chatting with the waitress at a Gasthof, and across a 10-hour day where you're constantly getting on and off the bike - the Hears Jet Black kept us comfortable, kept our intercom clear, kept us connected to the road, and didn't hurt. After five weekends and roughly 2,000 kilometers, our top 3 was: Hears, Alpine, Auritech. Loop and Flare were out.
The test wasn't over. For the Dolomites we'll be doing 8 to 10-hour days, four days straight. Short rides tell you nothing about how a plug feels after 8 hours. So in mid-April we did three back-to-back day tours - 250 to 400 km round-trip per day. All the variables: fast autobahn sections, slow mountain switchbacks, coffee stops, fuel stops, group intercom conversations, GPS directions, traffic jams.
The Hears Jet Black held across everything. Hour 9 of the third day, we still had them in. Nobody complained. Nobody had ear pressure. The intercom worked. The horns behind us were audible. We heard the engines at traffic lights.
Alpine MotoSafe Pro did what it's designed to do - it attenuated wind the most aggressively of the three. But by hour 6, two of us had outer-ear pressure from the stem. By hour 8, we were taking them out at stops to give our ears a break. On an 8-hour day, that's twenty separate helmet-on-helmet-off events. The plug falls out, you put it back in, you lose focus. Not ideal. Auritech Biker held well on Day 1 but by Day 2 two of our riders had given up on them entirely - the fit kept breaking after every rest stop, and after a few frustrating refits they switched back to Hears.
By the end of Day 3, the decision was made. Hears Jet Black is what we're taking to the Dolomites.
Our route is locked in. Garmisch over the Jaufenpass to Bolzano. The Sella Ronda loop. Four days. 1,400 km. Four riders. The same plug in every pocket.
After last year's aborted tour, we're not playing games anymore. Hears Jet Black is the one.
Years of regular use with occasional rinsing. Unlike foam, they're reusable. One pair replaces dozens of disposable plugs.
Can I actually hear my intercom with them in?
Yes. That was the biggest surprise of the whole test. Hears tune their filters so speech frequencies pass through cleanly. Intercom and GPS stayed clear across all three of our 8-hour test days.
Will they stay in under the helmet?
Ours did. 11 days of testing, 20+ helmet-on-off events per day, zero lost plugs. Hears ships three tip sizes in the box. Pick the size that creates a gentle seal without pressure.
Are they safe for a 10-hour riding day?
Yes. Rated for 10+ hours of continuous wear. We tested exactly that across three consecutive days.
How do they compare to custom-molded plugs?
Custom-molded plugs from an audiologist require a fitting appointment and weeks of waiting before you can wear them on a tour. Hears Jet Black ships in days, no appointment needed. For 95% of riders, the Jet Black delivers 95% of the result without the wait.
Is it legal to wear earplugs while riding?
Hearing protection is legal for riders in every EU country. In the US, it varies: Ohio prohibits earplug use while riding, Maryland permits custom-molded only, California allows them as long as your hearing isn't completely blocked. Always check your local laws before use.
Where should I buy them?
Direct from hears.com. Same-day dispatch, return window, free worldwide shipping. Avoid third-party resellers where counterfeits have been reported.
Touring season 2026 is starting now
Don't wait for the kind of ear pain that cuts a tour short.