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How to fix Bluetooth not working, connecting, or pairing

by Suzanne Kantra on June 03, 2026

Most of us treat Bluetooth as a basic feature that's just supposed to work. So when it doesn't, it's incredibly frustrating. If you've ever wrestled with headphones that refuse to connect or a speaker that keeps dropping out, you're not alone. And as someone who's reviewed hundreds of Bluetooth gadgets over the years, believe me, I've felt your pain.

Why your Bluetooth device isn't showing up when pairing

If you're trying to connect a Bluetooth accessory and it doesn't appear on the list of available devices, the problem is almost always one of three things: the accessory isn't in pairing mode, it's already connected to another device, or your phone or computer has stale pairing data that needs to be cleared before it can see the accessory again. Work through steps 1 through 5 before anything else.

Why you're seeing a "Pairing Unsuccessful" error

If the device shows up on the available list but fails to connect with an error like "pairing unsuccessful," "pairing rejected," or "pairing not accepted," the usual causes are that the accessory isn't in pairing mode or it's already connected elsewhere. A communications glitch can also trigger these errors. Toggling Bluetooth off and back on and restarting one or both devices usually clears it.

Why your Bluetooth device won't connect after pairing

When a Bluetooth device that previously worked stops connecting, the cause is almost always one of two things: Bluetooth is turned off on one of the devices, or the accessory has already connected to a different phone or computer nearby. Check those two things before working through the steps below.

10 ways to fix Bluetooth pairing problems

If the quick checks above didn't solve it, work through these fixes in order. They're organized from most likely cause to least, and from easiest to most involved.

1. Make sure Bluetooth is turned on

If Bluetooth isn't active on both devices, nothing else will work, so confirm this first.

On Android, swipe down to open Quick Settings. If the Bluetooth tile is highlighted, it's on. On iOS and iPadOS, go to Settings to enable or disable it. Windows users will find Bluetooth under Settings > Devices > Bluetooth (or in the taskbar shortcuts). Mac users will see a Bluetooth status icon in the menu bar.

If Bluetooth won't turn on at all, try restarting the device. If that doesn't help, a driver update may be what's needed (step 8 covers that).

2. Turn on pairing mode

Bluetooth devices fall into two categories: accessories (headphones, keyboards, speakers) and main devices (phones, computers, cars, TVs). They work differently when it comes to pairing.

Accessories typically start in pairing mode right out of the box, indicated by a blinking light. Once paired, you'll need to trigger pairing mode again to connect to a new device. Search for "how to put [product name] into pairing mode.

For main devices, activate Bluetooth first, then put the device into pairing mode through its settings menu. When both sides are in pairing mode, they usually find each other and connect. Some devices require an extra step, like entering a PIN or going through a manufacturer's app.

Pairing a phone with a car's infotainment system trips up more people than almost anything else. Start by activating Bluetooth on your phone and making it discoverable. Then put the car into pairing mode. On older models that typically means a specific button sequence; on newer models, it's usually a menu on the in-dash touchscreen. When the car detects your phone, you'll often see a numeric code on one or both screens to confirm. Both devices stay in pairing mode for only a few minutes, so if it times out before the confirmation step, you'll need to start over. Search for "[your car make and model] Bluetooth pairing" if the process isn't obvious from the screen.

3. Power Bluetooth off and back on

A soft reset clears minor communication glitches. On phones and computers, toggle Bluetooth off and on in Settings. On accessories like keyboards, speakers, or headphones, cycle the power off and back on.

4. Make sure you're connected to the correct device

Bluetooth accessories reconnect automatically to the most recently connected device. If your headphones are already connected to your laptop, they won't also connect to your phone without some intervention. Check whether your accessory is paired and active on another device, disconnect it there, then try again on the one you want to use.

Many modern headphones and speakers support multipoint pairing, which lets them stay connected to up to three devices simultaneously, switching between your phone and computer automatically. If you're running into issues specifically with multipoint, skip to the section below.

5. Forget the device and pair it again

Corrupted or outdated pairing data is a common cause of persistent connection failures. Remove the device from your Bluetooth settings entirely and start fresh. On iOS and iPadOS, tap the "i" icon next to the device name and select "Forget This Device." On Android, tap the device name and choose "Unpair" or "Forget." On Windows, click the three-dot menu next to the device and select "Remove." On Mac, hover over the device and click the X button or "Disconnect" to remove it.

If the accessory won't enter pairing mode at all, it may have reached the limit for stored connections. Most accessories cap out at somewhere between three and eight. Your options are to make one of your existing paired devices forget the accessory, freeing up a slot, or to factory reset the accessory to clear all stored pairings at once. The reset procedure is usually in the manual or findable with a quick search for "[device name] factory reset."

6. Make sure both devices are close enough

Most Bluetooth connections drop significantly after about 30 feet, and even sooner with walls or furniture in the way. During initial pairing, keep devices within five feet of each other.

7. Charge up both devices

Some devices power down Bluetooth automatically when the battery runs low. If a phone, tablet, or accessory is running on fumes, plug it in before trying to pair.

8. Check for software and firmware updates

Most headphones, speakers, and accessories run firmware that quietly controls how they connect and perform. A firmware update can solve pairing problems that seemed impossible to fix. Check the manufacturer's app or support site for anything available.

Older car audio systems sometimes fail to pair with newer phones because their Bluetooth profiles predate current standards. A vehicle firmware update, available from the manufacturer, may fix it. If you're not sure how to get firmware for your car, check the manufacturer's support page or contact the dealer.

If Bluetooth started misbehaving after a recent software update to your phone or computer, the update itself may be the culprit. Manufacturers frequently push follow-up patches for compatibility problems that slip through in major releases. Check under "Software Update" in your device settings.

For computers specifically, check for an updated Bluetooth driver on the manufacturer's support page. Installing it fixes a surprising number of persistent pairing failures on Windows machines.

9. Rule out wireless interference

Several household devices share the same 2.4GHz radio spectrum as Bluetooth: Wi-Fi routers, microwave ovens, baby monitors, and cordless phones can all cause interference.

Zigbee, a wireless protocol used in smart home hubs like Amazon's Echo Show and Samsung's SmartThings Hub as well as a wide range of smart locks, light bulbs, and sensors, operates in the same band. If your home is heavily wired with smart home gear, this is worth testing by moving the affected devices away from the hub.

USB 3 and USB-C ports are another overlooked source of interference. The ports themselves can leak 2.4GHz frequencies, and poorly shielded cables make it worse. If you're having trouble pairing Bluetooth devices near a desktop computer, move them away from USB connections. If you're using a Bluetooth dongle, try switching it to a different port.

10. Reset Bluetooth settings on your phone

If none of the above has worked, resetting your phone's network settings will clear any deep-seated Bluetooth glitches. The trade-off is that it also wipes all saved Wi-Fi networks and Bluetooth pairings, so you'll need to re-enter Wi-Fi passwords and re-pair all your devices afterward.

On iPhone, go to Settings > General > Transfer or Reset iPhone > Reset > Reset Network Settings.

On most Android phones, go to Settings > System > Reset options > Reset Wi-Fi, mobile & Bluetooth.

After the reset, your phone reconnects to your cellular carrier automatically. If you're on an MVNO (Mint, Visible, Cricket, Metro, or similar), you may need to re-enter APN settings manually. Your carrier can provide those.

Solving problems with Bluetooth multipoint pairing

Multipoint lets a Bluetooth device stay connected to more than one device at the same time, like your headphones paired to both your phone and laptop simultaneously. Before troubleshooting, confirm your accessory actually supports it by searching "[product name] multipoint Bluetooth" or checking the manual.

Once confirmed, the standard setup process for pairing headphones with both a phone and a computer looks like this:

  1. Pair the headphones with your phone the way you would with any standard Bluetooth connection.
  2. Leave your phone connected, put your headphones back into pairing mode, and pair them with your laptop.
  3. Once the laptop connection succeeds, you should be simultaneously connected to both devices.

Some manufacturers, including Sony and Bose, require you to enable multipoint through their app before a second connection will work. Check the app before concluding the hardware doesn't support it.

If your headphones keep reconnecting to the wrong device, the most likely explanation is that more paired devices are in range than the headphones can manage simultaneously. I've run into this myself. I spent too long troubleshooting before realizing my headphones had already grabbed a connection to my husband's phone. If your headphones have a companion app, use it to manage which devices get priority. Without an app, put the headphones into pairing mode and re-pair manually with the device you want.

Why Bluetooth pairing fails in the first place

Bluetooth depends on hardware and software working in sync. From a hardware perspective, both devices need to support the same 2.4GHz frequencies. On the software side, they need matching Bluetooth profiles, the protocols that define specific functions. A mouse can't pair with a car's infotainment system because the car doesn't support the Human Interface Device Profile.

Bluetooth is generally backward compatible. A device running Bluetooth 5 should still connect to one running the ancient Bluetooth 2.1 from 2007. Large version gaps can occasionally produce unexpected pairing issues or limited functionality, but it's rarely the main problem.

The good news is that unless there's a true hardware or software incompatibility, nearly every Bluetooth pairing problem traces back to the same handful of causes: pairing mode, saved connections, interference, outdated software, or the accessory already being connected elsewhere. The fix is almost always simpler than it looks.

Updated June 3, 2026 with new recommendations

[Image credit: Techlicious]


Topics

Phones and Mobile, Computers and Software, Phone Accessories, Tips & How-Tos


Discussion loading

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From Baig on December 01, 2017 :: 3:22 pm


I am having a problem with my tablet’s Bluetooth. It never turns on

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From Dan Kelly on December 05, 2017 :: 5:27 pm


There’s one you missed…

Clear Bluetooth App Data

That is the only thing that seems to work for me.

But, it’s early to tell if my issue is totally fixed.

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From UreKismet on December 10, 2017 :: 11:09 pm


Now that every portable consumable comes bluetooth enabled or compulsory; after this holiday season I expect every human on the planet to take a set against this badly conceived poorly implemented tech.
The only question is will it go the same way as 3d screen and where VR is inevitably headed, or will it because it is inexpensive to implement, merely be relegated to the small print on the tin?
Obviously as anyone who has spent too much time trying to pair two bluetooth devices when neither have the benefit of a gui but each has an accursed ‘multi-function button’ instead, bluetooth has shifted from being a must have selling point to a tech to be avoided.
Under normal circs product engineers would toss bluetooth on the scrapheap where it belongs but it is cheaper and easier to package than 3.5mm cables and the like - & enables at least $50 to be chucked on to recommended retail because device is ‘wireless’ but like most I have found the recharging demands of any bluetooth device to be far from wireless.  A big thankyou also needs be given to those drongos who design their equipment to switch off during recharging (hiya Sennheiser)so that a user has to tolerate considerable downtime with their device.
Bluetooth - whose silly idea was that again?

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From sean on June 06, 2020 :: 12:31 pm


Word for word, my sentiments exactly.

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From Jan on December 19, 2017 :: 12:41 am


I have successfully paired my Samsung 6 with the Uniden home phone system. But every time I leave range of the home phone and then return to the house with my mobile phone, it asks me to reset the pin.  Every few seconds until I pair up again by physically asking the Uniden phone to find my mobile phone at the same time as entering the pin.  Driving me mad.  I’ve unpaired both but and then re-paired but makes no difference.  When I first set up the phone a month ago it worked well.  No more…Ideas?

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From Suzanne Kantra on December 22, 2017 :: 8:16 pm


You can try clearing the Bluetooth cache. To do that, go to Settings > Application Manager and then select Bluetooth. Select Clear cache and then Clear data. Restart your phone when the operation is complete. Hope this helps.

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From Janine on December 27, 2017 :: 6:32 pm


Hi Suzanne,

Thanks for your tip.  My phone does not seem to allow me to clear cache in the apps manager.  Any other suggestions? 

Many thanks,

Janine

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From Jay on January 04, 2018 :: 1:52 am


The earbuds arn’t even showing up on my phone as an option to connect through bluetooth. This is strange for 2 reasons. One being that it has connected fluently to my phone several times without any problems. And the other reason is that I am able to connect to my PC with windows 10 on it (but not my phone). I just got these this Christmas. the slightest help is much appreciated.

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From Peter on January 07, 2018 :: 1:53 pm


İten 8 solvedd myy bluetooth issue. Tanks a lott.

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From ava rose goodwalt on January 08, 2018 :: 3:59 am


i got my vivitar headphones 2 weeks ago and they were working fine untill they stopped pairing to my chrome book. Help!

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From Adam Rogers on January 15, 2018 :: 8:17 pm


Bluetooth pairs but the mic does not work to receive phone calls or use Google assist.

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From Karthikeyan on January 16, 2018 :: 9:20 am


Hey!  Thanks for the article I was looking for a problem that I faced in Jabra Talk on Lenovo K3 Note. Though the headset was paired and in use, sometimes it get connected with message “NO PHONE” and stops working. i.e. the Phone shows blue tooth headset in connected mode but not able to speak/listen to calls in the headset. The problem got solved by unpairing the headset and restarting the phone and pairing it again. Hope it is helpful to others who face similar problem. Thanks..

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From Blair on January 17, 2018 :: 10:27 pm


I was using it yesterday and now when I go to use it it says it’s “Unable to connect to Bluetooth input device while being used as a Bluetooth input device” what does that mean? I’ve went into settings turned each of them off, and its not working. I’m very confused

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From Suzanne Kantra on January 17, 2018 :: 10:54 pm


Sounds like your Tab A thinks the keyboard is being used by another device. Did you only pair the keyboard with the tablet? And what else is your tablet paired with that would be nearby?

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From amanda whybrow on January 18, 2018 :: 6:47 pm


My smartphone screen is broken & so I can’t use settings. How can I unpair my SoundPeats Q7 earphones in order to pair to new phone? They don’t want to pair to a 2nd device. Thanks

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From Sridhar on January 25, 2018 :: 3:17 am


The Bluetooth headset is not connected in my mobile.
Bluetooth headset name not showing in display
How to connecting the Bluetooth headset

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From LaTasha on January 26, 2018 :: 5:35 pm


I had trouble connecting my smartphone to my polaroid bluetooth speaker, but after reading your article and applying the methods you explained I was able to connect thank you for this article.

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From Josh Kirschner on January 26, 2018 :: 6:11 pm


Always happy to hear when we’re able to help people out. Thank you for letting us know.

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From CARLEY on May 04, 2021 :: 5:24 pm


can you help me connect my Bluetooth?

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From Michael Nutting on January 30, 2018 :: 7:18 pm


I read with interest the number of articles about issues with win 10 phones and BT connections failing or not re connecting on subsequent connections with the same device.

It can be seen that some smart phones like Samsung S8, S8+ and I phones re connect to the paired devices automatically once in range however with windows this is not the case especially found with win 10 phones and connection via BT and a car, here it is required to always connect the phone with the car to do this on the win 10 phone when in the car open BT settings on the phone and select the paired device needing connection hit connect and away you go it works all the time, just remember always go to BT settings on the win 10 phone and hit connect.

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From Kirstie on February 02, 2018 :: 5:54 pm


I have Bluetooth headphones which I think are connected to another device, I want to connect them to my iPod touch and although when I listen to them they say connected it isn’t to my iPod, how can I clear the memory of devices on my headphones ( they are standard vol up and vol down button and main button in middleJ

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From Andrew Ravenwood on February 03, 2018 :: 12:15 pm


Thanks for number 6. I had a phone blocking the connection.
Was driving me bonkers. Thanks

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From Tammy on February 06, 2018 :: 7:00 pm


If all else fails…ALL ..u have to do is keep trying it in your spare time..it may take a few days ..meaning 1-2 or up to 4 days…just keep trying it..it will eventually connect..

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From Ratul on February 08, 2018 :: 4:33 pm


Bluetooth I cannot Find my bluetooth headset device…..do you have any answer

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From Sonnycanuck on September 15, 2021 :: 5:48 pm


an’t pair for past month.  Used to pair earlier but no device on right side

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From Lyn on February 08, 2018 :: 9:45 pm


I keep deleting a phone from my car radio. The phone that keeps adding itself is not a phone I own. How is that even possible.

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From Austin on February 14, 2018 :: 12:25 pm


Thanks for the help I really needed the help

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From Shay on February 14, 2018 :: 12:41 pm


All of a sudden the bluetooth audio in my car won’t connect to my phone. They only pair with call audio but will not connect with media audio. Please help?

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From e3 on February 23, 2018 :: 5:50 pm


Hi & thanks for your post,

Went through your tips but unsuccessful yet trying to pair my Miniso Minispeaker with my Win10 Lenovo Ideapad 100s. On first attempt, the BT detected the speaker name but failed showing a Try connecting again yellow caption. Tried again million times. Now BT doesn’t even find the device. They’re both charged. Speakers work on every other device I connect them to.

THanks again!

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From Psswrd Confusion1? on February 27, 2018 :: 3:57 pm


Hi
My. bluetooth worked just fine in my car for 3 plus years with my IPhone 6. Last week
I Had a new battery put in my car and it hasn’t worked since. Any suggestions?
Thanks

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From Josh Kirschner on February 27, 2018 :: 6:10 pm


Did you try deleting your phone from the car and re-pairing it? Also, deleting the car from your phone before re-pairing?

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From Kendall Maine on March 02, 2018 :: 12:35 am


I have a GS7 and a brand new Plantronics PLT. I have had the earpiece for a couple days and it worked fine. I had to do a hard reset on the phone and now the earpiece won’t pair. I have tried all the normal advice. i.e., wiping the cache, powering off the devices then powering them back on, even another factory reset. Nothing is working. Is there anything else I can do?

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From Nithish on March 18, 2018 :: 2:45 pm


I have a srs btv 5 Sony Bluetooth speaker. It’s pairing but no sound.

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From Nithish on March 18, 2018 :: 2:49 pm


I hv A Sony srv bts 5 bluetooth speaker

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From Birb on March 24, 2018 :: 11:57 am


So I have had wireless headphones for about 3 months now and they connected just fine to my phone. Today however when I turned on bluetooth on my phone and turned on the headphones the headphones didn’t even show up on my phone so I could not connect them.
Anyone know what could be the issue and how I could fix it?

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From Josh Kirschner on March 26, 2018 :: 11:58 am


Try the steps above and let us know if they worked.

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From Jennifer Flynn on March 25, 2018 :: 10:25 pm


I am doing a group project with 1sheeld+ android studio and arudino. I am having terrible issues connecting 1sheeld+ to my phone app. If I turn on bluetooth before I run the app it asks for a pin, which should be either 0000 or 1234. It does not accept either. It asks if 1sheeld is ready for pairing. Does anyone know anything about this? I am searching everywhere online for info on this. please advise if someone knows.

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From Alan MacDonald on April 13, 2019 :: 3:27 am


first of all it didn’t pair with my phone and the instruction manual was hard to read as well

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From Eddie on March 31, 2018 :: 3:42 am


How do I pair a Samsung tab A(2016) with an iPhone X, having problems pairing them.

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From Prosperken on April 01, 2018 :: 6:40 pm


Thanks, this fixed it. I also installed an android app to facilitate it

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From Kaitlyn on April 02, 2018 :: 8:43 pm


I recently got a new phone and I’m trying to pair my wireless headphones to it and my phone cannot find my headphones. I’ve tried everything I can think of trying to get these things to pair and both are new so I don’t understand the problem. Headphones worked just fine with my old device and I don’t understand why it won’t work.

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From jackie on April 13, 2018 :: 1:56 pm


beautiful, had the trekz titanium that wasn’t pairing with my iPhone.  did the soft shut down (going to airplane mode then back) and it paired right up.  THANK YOU!

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From Amber Towle on April 19, 2018 :: 7:59 pm


Thank you for this article! It turns out my power saving mode kept disconnecting my bluetooth keyboard.

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From kobs on April 21, 2018 :: 6:08 pm


I have these skull candy BT buds and all of a sudden they couldn’t be paired. Ipod saw it but that device said it wasn’t on. Told the ipod to forget that JIB device and rediscovered it it works… Thanks wink

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From cj on April 23, 2018 :: 3:50 pm


my computer is a peice of &*&^%^%^&*^%

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From DH on April 23, 2018 :: 11:30 pm


My Woodulisten speaker will not pair with my SanDisk Clip Sport MP3 player, but easily pairs with my other Bluetooth devices.  Any suggestions?

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From kobs on April 24, 2018 :: 12:37 am


Try what I did, remove the speakers from your player (somewhere it must give the name of your speakers in the list of pairing devices in your player) and let it find it again. I had the same problem with my earbuds and it worked.

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From Dhaval Vora on April 27, 2018 :: 2:16 am


i have sync by 50 in-ear bt (wireless device)
and problem is left side earbud is canecting time is working and play the song but after 5 mints left side is not working and right is working
so help me and how to solw this problem

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From Josh Kirschner on April 30, 2018 :: 12:48 pm


The SYNC by 50 Wireless In-Ear Sport headphones received poor user reviews on Amazon. While the product is no longer available, looking at the cached information, they had 2.7 out of 5 stars, with many users complaining of Bluetooth connection issues.

If you’re looking for something better, we just put out our guide on The Best Wire-free In-ear Headphones. Or, if you’re not looking to spend as much, see our Guide to Bluetooth Headphones Under $50

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From Ryah Majestic Ritthaler on April 30, 2018 :: 11:53 am


I am having the exact same issue! I don’t see a reply for you. Have you figured out a solution?

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