Hi everyone,
I’m thinking about buying the AirPods Pro Max and would mainly use them with my Mac and VoiceOver.
Does anyone know if there’s any noticeable delay when typing while VoiceOver is speaking?
I’d rather not spend that much money if the response time isn’t great.
Thanks for sharing your experience!
By Florian Schwab, 1 September, 2025
Forum
Apple Hardware and Compatible Accessories
Comments
I will be surprised if it lags
I have the Airpods Pro 2 and they have very Minimal lag. The Max has a hefty price so you may think of alternatives as they have lower price point with equivalent quality of build and audio.
thx
i need head phones with good buttons i have all ready tested the beads but the buttons are not compatible with my disabilitys
Cant speak for airpods max but
Seconding about the airpods pro not having any delay, I'm guessing the airpods max are the same.
Re: comparable builds.
Out of curiosity, what do you consider comparable? I ask because I tried quite a few headphones and ended up with the Airpods Pro second Gen, because they just sounded the best. I started with some sort of wireless earbuds touted by some site, maybe AT Guys? They were not great. Then I got Airpods Pro and returned them because they seemed pretty losable. Then I tried Beats because Apple said they had a lot of the same features. I was not impressed, Esp. compared to the Airpods. So I ended up going with them in the end.
Other things that *might* have been comparable, e.g. Sony, Bose, seemed as expensive, or more, than the Airpods. I think I tried at least one other brand I'm forgetting about. IMO nothing had comparable sound quality.
No lag if you tether over USB
Wireless audio devices always have a little bit of noticeable lag due to buffering, and the AirPods Max are no exception, however the current version of the firmware for the USB-c variant provides USB audio support meaning no lag and even lossless audio support if you use them wired, which is what I do. In addition to USB audio, Apple also makes available a male-male 3.5mm headphone jack to USB-c cable that you can use to plug into analog audio devices (they used to sell a Lightning variant of this cable as well but it appears to have been discontinued along with the Lightning AirPods Max themselves). The ability to use these headphones wired and connect to analog devices were the two selling points for me personally.
A few things to note:
New EarPods Max user
I've had the EarPods max for a bit over two days now, and I have to say that they're the best headphones I've ever used. About the only downside to them that I can find is their selling price--which is the cost of a low-end windows laptop. Mind you, I think the headphones offer more bang, or boom, per buck than a budget laptop, but it still feels like a steep price to pay for an audio accessory. Still, I haven't had any reason to regret the purchase.
LE Audio
I'm not sure how Apple got the latency as low as they did when to my knowledge they're using the AAC codec over standard Bluetooth, though knowing them, it's probably some super proprietary system we'll never know about. I wish they'd support LE Audio, particularly on a product as expensive as these AirPods Max models which should support it since they use Bluetooth 5.2 or 5.3. I love using LE Audio on my Surface Laptop with my cheap $80 Zen Hybrid Pro headphones that also support the system. In fact, I heard Microsoft is planning to improve audio quality by allowing LE Audio devices to simultaneously transmit stereo audio while using the microphone, which is something that's unique to LE Audio. I don't think Apple can match that with their current system. I can't tell the difference between wired and wireless anymore. This is as good if not better than aptX Low Latency. Sadly, Apple appears to only care about their AAC codec and whatever other proprietary stuff they've built, so I wouldn't be surprised if this never arrives on hardware that can technically support it. Apple makes great products, but their arrogance and proprietary nature spoil the experience to a degree.