Skip to main content

Digital Trends may earn a commission when you buy through links on our site. Why trust us?

Apple AirPods Max finally get lossless audio and analog support

Apple AirPods Max with USB-C in Orange.
Caleb Denison / Digital Trends

Apple is about to correct one of the most glaring omissions on its AirPods Max wireless noise-canceling headphones: Starting in April, the headphones will get a firmware update that enables lossless audio via the included USB-C cable at up to 24-bit/48kHz. As a wired connection, this also gives the headphones an ultra low-latency audio pathway, which is helpful for gaming.

And starting today, Apple is selling a $39 3.5mm-to-USB-C accessory cable that lets the newest version of the AirPods Max connect to analog audio sources like airplane jacks — something these headphones haven’t been able to do since they launched. The new cable is also compatible with the USB-C jack on the Beats Studio Pro.

Recommended Videos

To get the April update, you’ll need to use an Apple device with iOS 18.4, iPadOS 18.4, or macOS Sequoia 15.4.

Apple says that in addition to the obvious benefit of being able to finally listen to lossless audio sources (including all lossless tracks on Apple Music) without additional compression, you’ll also be able to use Personalized Spatial Audio (with or without head tracking). The company highlight the importance of this feature to creators and musicians: “Next month, AirPods Max will become the only headphones that enable musicians to both create and mix in Personalized Spatial Audio with head tracking.”

Unfortunately, it appears that support for lossless audio is limited to just the new, USB-C-equipped version of the AirPods Max, which were announced in October 2024. I’ve asked Apple about lossless support for the original, lightning-equipped AirPods Max and will update this post if and when I hear back.

While the addition of lossless and analog audio are welcome changes, I think Apple still has more work to do. The AirPods Max should have longer battery life, and Apple needs to work out a way to support lossless audio wirelessly, either via Bluetooth, Wi-Fi, or UWB. Lossless audio is great, but you shouldn’t have to be tethered to your computer or phone to experience it.

Simon Cohen
Contributing Editor, A/V
Simon Cohen is a contributing editor to Digital Trends' Audio/Video section, where he obsesses over the latest wireless…
Why the AirPods Pro’s best new feature is forbidden in over 100 countries
An Apple iPhone 14 showing the limited hearing protection options available in Canada under iOS 18.1.

Guess what Canada, France, Spain, China, the United Kingdom, Mexico, and 100 other countries have in common? None are able to take advantage of the Apple AirPods Pro 2's best new hearing health features.

Sitting in my home office in Toronto, I learned this the hard way: After upgrading my iPhone and AirPods Pro 2 to the latest software this week, I was offered the hearing protection feature, but I still couldn't see the hearing test and hearing aid options slated to arrive with iOS 18.1.

Read more
I’ve been using AirPods Pro as hearing protection for years
Apple AirPods Pro 2 sitting in front of a motorcycle helmet.

With the launch of iOS 18.1 imminent, Apple is about to officially recognize the AirPods Pro’s hearing protection capabilities. And all I can say is this: What took so long?

For seven years, I rode a Harley-Davidson touring bike with aftermarket pipes and a high-flow air intake — modifications that made it a lot louder than when it rolled off the assembly line. On most motorcycles it’s wind noise and not the sound of your bike that poses the greatest risk to your hearing. Not so with my Harley.

Read more
With FDA approval, AirPods Pro can now help tackle hearing aid stigma
A person wearing the Apple AirPods Pro 2.

It's official: Apple has won U.S. Food and Drug Adminstration (FDA) clearance to market its AirPods Pro 2 wireless earbuds as OTC hearing aids. The evolution of these personal audio devices into full-fledged hearing aids could have big ramifications for the fledgling over-the-counter hearing aid market and people's willingness to adopt these devices.

At its iPhone 16 launch event in September, Apple announced that its existing flagship wireless earbuds will get several new hearing health features later this fall.

Read more