Best outdoor speakers 2024: The best all-weather speakers
You might have a fantastic speaker in your living room right now, but that doesn’t mean it’s suitable for listening outside. That’s why we’ve put together this guide to the best outdoor speakers.
While great sound quality remains at the top of the list, there are other criteria you need to consider when taking a speaker into the great outdoors. For example, a rugged design is essential if you plan to place your speaker somewhere it could be exposed to the elements, such as the beach. For this, it’s good to keep your eye out for a solid IP rating.
You’re also going to want the speaker to be lightweight and wireless. Unless your garden is your limit, you’re probably going to need to carry the speaker to your chosen location, meaning a speaker that weighs you down or doesn’t fit in your bag isn’t going to be ideal.
There’s also battery life to consider. There are no plug sockets outdoors, so it’s best to make sure you choose a speaker with the battery capacity to last a decent number of hours without requiring a recharge – especially if you’ll be venturing far from home.
Of course, all of this doesn’t mean we don’t look at other specs when recommending an outdoor speaker. Audio quality remains supremely important and we test every speaker both indoors and outdoors to ensure they sound great. We also make sure to examine any additional features on board, as well as the controls to ensure the speakers on this list are easy to use.
We’ve identified the best outdoor speakers for different use cases and budgets, so whether you’re looking for a small, affordable speaker to listen at the park or a big, bass-heavy option to fill your garden during your next party, we’ve got you covered.
We also recommend checking out some of our other audio best lists, including the best Bluetooth speakers, best smart speakers and best multi-room speakers.
Best outdoor speakers at a glance
- Best portable speaker: Bang & Olufsen Beosound A1 2nd Gen – check price
- Best outdoor speakers for gardens: Sonos Move 2 – check price
- Best outdoor speaker under £400: Sonos Move – check price
- Best portable speaker less than £200: Sonos Roam – check price
- Best portable speaker under £100: Ultimate Ears Wonderboom 3 – check price
- Best affordable outdoor speaker: Tribit Stormbox Micro 2 – check price
- Best outdoor party speaker: Sony SRS-XG300 – check price
How we test
We play a lot of music, and we play it loud. We play it everywhere – in the house, in the garden, and even in the bath if a speaker is waterproof.
We don’t just listen to the speakers; if there are special features then we make sure we fiddle with them until we’re satisfied. Some Bluetooth speakers have smart functionality, and as a result we’ve started speaking to our speakers as well. With portable speakers we take them outside and listen to them to get a feel for how they sound in the great outdoors.
Of course, it always comes back to the music. Speakers are tested by reviewers who have a love of music, a knowledge of sound quality, as well as a context of the market. We’ll listen to Bluetooth speakers alongside similarly priced rivals, so when we recommend a particular model, it’s among the best you can buy for the money.
- Excellent sound
- Portable
- Alexa support
- Great style
- Waterproof design
- Pricey
- Big, powerful sound
- Confident bass performance
- Works like any other Sonos speaker in the home
- Voice assistant and multi-room capability
- Expensive
- Not strictly portable
- Not the sharpest sounding speaker
- Excellent, neutral-sounding performance
- Well built
- New features are useful
- Easy to use
- Auto Trueplay
- Sonos S2 little flaky with new features
- Rather functional looks
- Wireless charging plate an optional extra
- Improved audio
- Extended battery life
- Resilient build quality
- More sustainable design
- Same price as before
- Lack of USB-C charging
- No stereo pairing with older models
- Rich, likable sound
- Solid portability
- Long battery life
- Fun audio effects/customisations
- Not the most detailed presentation
- A little heavy to carry
- Improved sound over original
- Boosted battery life
- Can charge other devices
- Affordable price
- Dust and waterproof design
- May lack a sense of fun for some
- Excellent battery life
- High-quality audio
- Works as a regular Sonos speaker at home
- Expensive
- Line-in adaptor is optional extra
Bang and Olufsen Beosound A1 2nd Gen
Best portable speaker
Pros
- Excellent sound
- Portable
- Alexa support
- Great style
- Waterproof design
Cons
- Still pricey
The Bang & Olufsen Beosound A1 2nd Gen is a sensational-sounding speaker and, for a Bluetooth speaker, it supports smarts in the form of Alexa voice assistance.
It achieves Alexa control through a smartphone, so the Alexa app needs to be downloaded on the mobile device as the A1 2nd Gen does not natively support it. During our time with the speaker, we found summoning Alexa work rather well in a local park, proving to be responsive at handling queries. Alexa wasn’t as quick to chime in when our smartphone was performing another task, so we’d suggest you keep attempts at multi-tasking low if you want a fast response.
Compared to the Beoplay A1, battery life has also had a upgrade, with the Beosound A1 able to last for 18 hours, where the original model could only reach four hours. The B&O companion app offers some decent functionality with EQ presets and volume control, though there are fewer features than what you’d get with a Wi-Fi enabled speaker.
As a B&O product, the Beosound A1 looks the part with a stylish leather base and aluminium top surface that helps the speaker achieve an IP67 water resistance, which is the same as the Wonderboom 3. It is lighter than its predecessor at 558g, which helps to make it easier to carry around, and its leather strap has been tweaked to allow for more hanging options. The tweaks to the design make it a little more convenient to carry with you.
The audio performance is one that we found to be very impressive, the sound quality was impressively clear, with bass better emphasised that the Sonos Roam. Vocal clarity is excellent with voices granted plenty of space to exist, the tonal balance throughout the frequency range is great, and it’s a very dynamic and exciting. This is one of the best outdoor speakers we’ve come across.
Reviewer: Kob Monney
Full Review: B&O Beosound A1 2nd Gen
Sonos Roam
Best portable speaker under £200
Pros
- Excellent, neutral-sounding performance
- Well built
- New features are useful
- Easy to use
- Auto Trueplay
Cons
- Sonos S2 little flaky with new features
- Rather functional looks
- Wireless charging plate an optional extra
The Sonos Roam is what we envisaged the Sonos Move would be. Both operate as a Sonos-like speaker in the home, but out of the two, the Roam is easily the more portable wireless speaker.
The Roam is the speaker out of the two we’d feel you’d be taking on longer journeys. It’s small, lightweight and takes on a shape that’s reminiscent of a Toblerone bar. With an IP67 rating, it can be submerged in water of 1m depth for 30 minutes, so if it happens to fall in a small body water (or perhaps a paddling pool), it should be able to survive unscathed.
We’ve found few wireless speakers combine Wi-Fi and Bluetooth connectivity as effortlessly as the Roam. In the home it can function like a smart speaker, connecting to the Wi-Fi and supporting the likes of Amazon Alexa and Google Assistant voice support. The Sonos S2 app features wide support for music streaming services, so you can log in and listen to your favourite songs from within the app. None of these features are available when streaming over Bluetooth, but an update brought Sonos’ Auto Trueplay feature that optimises its audio delivery to allow it on both Wi-Fi and Bluetooth playback
A battery life of 11 hours is not as progressive as we’ve seen around the £150 price point, less than the JBL Charge 5, Marshall Emberton II and Ultimate Ears Wonderboom 3. There is a battery saver option in the app to help preserve the battery if it’s found to be draining too fast.
In our opinion, the Roam remains a terrific listen years after its release. It produces a natural, detailed and clear performance, though we found it a bit light on bass, but that’s not surprising given its small size. If you want more thump where low frequencies are concerned, Bang & Olufsen’s Beosound A1 2nd Gen provides it.
For existing Sonos owners it makes plenty of sense as it extends the Sonos sound into the outdoors. For everyone else it’s one the cheapest ways into the world of Sonos.
Reviewer: Kob Monney
Full Review: Sonos Roam
Ultimate Ears Wonderboom 3
Best outdoor speaker under £100
Pros
- Improved audio
- Extended battery life
- Resilient build quality
- More sustainable design
- Same price as before
Cons
- Lack of USB-C charging
- No stereo pairing with older models
The Ultimate Ears Wonderboom 3 continues on from where the Wonderboom 2 left off, and while on the surface the changes made don’t appear a massive step up, in our opinion it produces a much better sound for the same price.
It produces a more effective and rounded bass performance, as well as striking a tone that’s clearer, detailed and better balanced than its energetic predecessor. While treble notes don’t register as crisply, there’s plenty of detail at the top end of the frequency range and there’s more room within the midrange for vocals to be projected above instruments and beats. In terms of loudness, the Wonderboom 2 hits a higher volume but it isn’t as nuanced as the threequel.
Other new features include Google Fast Pair for Android devices and a slight increase to 14 hours of battery life (better than the more expensive Sonos Roam). Some will feel that the continuation with micro-USB charging is not a forward-looking decision as many devices have moved to the quicker USB-C charging method. The rest of the features carry on from before with Outdoor Boost making the speaker sound more expansive and bringing clarity to the midrange and treble frequencies, while Double Up adds the functionality of using two Wonderboom 3 speakers in a stereo pair. You cannot use the Wonderboom from different generations as a stereo pair, however.
The design has been slightly tweaked, the two-tone colours take on a more contrasting appearance. Otherwise there’s the scratch-proof fabric material (guarding against feral domestic pets), and with a IP67 rating the speaker can repel dust and water, as well dunked under water for 30 minutes (though it’s likely to bob on surface).
The changes aren’t as big as many might have expected, but in our opinion this is a better-sounding speaker for the same unbeatably low price.
Reviewer: Kob Monney
Full Review: Ultimate Ears Wonderboom 3
Tribit StormBox Micro 2
Best affordable outdoor speaker
Pros
- Improved sound over original
- Boosted battery life
- Can charge other devices
- Affordable price
- Dust and waterproof design
Cons
- May lack a sense of fun for some
We very much liked the original Stormbox Micro but felt it could be improved in a few areas. The Micro 2 seems to have taken on that feedback and it’s an improvement in pretty much every way.
The design has been tweaked with buttons coloured white to contrast against the black fabric covering and the speaker’s dimensions are bigger, holding more battery life (12 hours) and able to be used as a power bank to charge mobile devices. The useful tear-resistant strap remains, offering plenty of versatility in how the speaker can be used or transported whether it’s attached to the handlebar of a bike or connected to a rucksack.
Like many of the speakers on this list, the Stormbox Micro 2 hits an IP67 rating, insulating it against dust and water as well as being immersed within a body of water 1m deep for thirty minutes.
As we mentioned, battery life is up to 12 hours, which puts it among the likes of the Sonos Roam (11) and Ultimate Ears Wonderboom 3 (14) except the Tribit is much cheaper than either. Also new is support for an app where the speaker’s sound can be adjusted.
In terms of its audio performance, the Micro 2 can hit higher volumes than the original, produces a bigger sound and projects audio further way from the speaker’s body. Add in to the mix better levels of clarity and detail, and music on this speaker sounds improved over the original, with bass better described, treble frequencies sharper and clearer and the midrange is more detailed and clearer.
While bass is better than before, speakers such as the Tronsmart T7 can produce more, but that speaker comes in a different form factor and isn’t as compact (or as versatile in its design) as the Tribit.
Reviewer: Kob Monney
Full Review: Tribit Stormbox Micro 2
Sonos Move 2
Best outdoor speaker for gardens
Pros
Cons
Four years after the original launched, Sonos brought the sequel to the Move in the Move 2, featuring a number of design tweaks and a redesigned audio system, though this does come at a cost, with a higher price of £449 / $449.
Nothing has really changed in the size of the speaker, we feel this remains more an outdoor speaker for the garden or to take with you in a car. It still weighs 3kg, so this isn’t really a speaker to slip in your bag and head out of the house with. The buttons have been tweaked so they’re easier to understand and use. Black, white, and a fetching green finishes are the colours the speaker comes in.
An IP56 rating means this speaker is protected against dust, water, and mud, although it’s not rated against is submersion in water. You can feel confident in leaving this speaker outside, and not having to worry about it being ruined in the morning. The battery can be replaced too, good for the longevity of the product as well as being better for the environment.
With Sonos’ Auto Trueplay feature, the speaker is able to automatically optimise audio output based on where it is placed placement for the best sound quality when the microphone is enabled. The biggest boost is to battery life which is now 24 hours (13 hours better than the original). During an eight hour session, we found that battery life fell to 54%, which we feel is more than good enough for any occasion.
But outdoor use isn’t the only reason to get the Move 2, as with its Wi-Fi support (Spotify Connect, AirPlay 2), this speaker works like any other Sonos speaker when used indoors. There’s hands-free access Amazon Alexa and Sonos Voice Control, but there’s no Google Assistant on this model.
The audio quality is another area that’s gained improvements. The speaker now supports stereo playback, producing a wider presence than original’s mono speaker was capable of. Purchase two of these speakers, and you can get full-on stereo playback. We found there was more subtlety that this speaker was capable of, better at retrieving the detail in a song, and when it needs to, it can summon plenty of punch and weight to the midrange and low frequencies.
This is an improvement on the original model, the price increase is at least justified by the better audio quality, stereo sound and improved batter life. The old Move is still a fine effort, on sale for less than £400 / $400 if you find this new speaker a little steep in terms of pricing.
Reviewer: David Ludlow
Full review: Sonos Move 2
Sonos Move
Best portable speaker under £400
Pros
- Big, powerful sound
- Confident bass performance
- Works like any other Sonos speaker in the home
- Voice assistant and multi-room capability
Cons
- Expensive
- Not strictly portable
- Not the sharpest sounding speaker
The Sonos Move is positioned as a larger speaker for use outdoors compared to the Roam, but a good choice if you’re in need of a bigger sound for parties and gatherings in a garden.
It weighs 3kg, which isn’t exactly portable in the truest sense but in our opinion, the integrated handle actually makes it seem lighter than it is when carrying it about. Build quality is what we’d describe as durable, and while we wouldn’t recommend dropping the speaker from any height, we accidentally did and the result was a tiny mark that we can’t actually locate any more. Rated at IP56 rated, meaning it’s well protected against dust and mud, and should be able to withstand all types of conditions the British weather can throw.
It’s available in two finishes in Shadow Black and Lunar White, the former serves the purpose of protecting the Move against overheating.
Used indoors and the Move works much like any other Sonos speaker when connected to Wi Fi. There’s hands-free access Amazon Alexa and Google Assistant, both of which are quick to respond to requests. Other Wi-Fi related features include AirPlay 2 that brings multi-room and connectivity to iOS products into the equation as well as support for Siri.
Sonos’ Auto Trueplay feature automatically optimises audio output based on the speakers’ placement for the best sound quality, while battery life has been extended to up to 11 hours (it was originally 10) through an update. If damaged, Sonos supports replacement of the battery.
We found the Move to be one of the better-sounding outdoor speakers, much like its smaller Roam sibling. It’s a neutral-sounding speaker with good amounts of detail, clarity and sharpness to its presentation. It handles the low end with confidence, though if you want more bass and a wider soundstage then the Sony SRS-XG300 is a good (and less expensive) alternative. However, that speaker doesn’t have the top-end clarity with high-frequency notes that the Move has.
Regardless of what you listen to, the Move puts in a clear, precise and detailed performance that works well across a range of genres, and it’s capable of going pretty loud, though bass does appear to be nerfed at higher volumes.
Reviewer: Kob Monney
Full review: Sonos Move
Sony SRS-XG300
Best outdoor party speaker
Pros
- Rich, likable sound
- Solid portability
- Long battery life
- Fun audio effects/customisations
Cons
- Not the most detailed presentation
- A little heavy to carry
The XG300 is part of Sony’s X-series of wireless party speakers, and if you are looking to party with a group of friends either inside or at the park (or beach), the XG300 is high on the list of speakers we’d say you should consider.
It is like mini-Boombox in its profile, taking on a svelte shape that gives it an hourglass look. The retractable handle is useful for carry considering this speaker weighs around 3kg, and with its IP67 rating it’s good against resisting liquids and particles such as sand and dust.
It has more physical connections than any other speaker on this list, with a USB-C for charging another device, and a stereo mini-jack (cable also included) for plugging in an external source (such as a portable music player). There’s also the Light feature – or Ambient Illumination as Sony calls it – that emits a halo of light at either end of the speaker that pulses in sync with the beat, although we found at its default setting it wasn’t particularly noticeable.
Other party features include support for Fiestable app, which offers control over DJ effects, light effects and Motion Control, where playback and volume can be controlled by moving a smartphone, although this is a feature that can be hit and miss. Battery life is 25 hours, the longest of any on this list; Google Fast Pair is provided for instant connection to an Android device and there’s LDAC Bluetooth for those that want to play tracks at a higher bitrate.
In terms of its sound, the SRS-XG300 delivers a warm, rich performance with an emphasis on bass. Those after a more neutral and balanced performance should consider the Sonos Move as an alternative, but if you like your bass assertively described, and music given plenty of drive and energy then the XG300 is a definite party starter (though B&O’s Beolit 20 can summon even stronger levels of bass if that’s your fancy).
Reviewer: Kob Monney
Full review: Sony SRS-XG300
FAQs
IP stands for Ingress Protection, and it refers to a products ability to withstand ingress of dust and water. The higher the rating a product has, the better the protection.
If power is what you want, then you’d be looking at a bigger speaker, such as the B&O Beolit 20, Marshall Tufton and Sonos Move.
B&O’s Beosound A1 2nd Gen is one of the best-sounding portable speakers we’ve tested, with excellent clarity and good bass for its size.