Logitech Zone Vibe 100 Wireless Headset
Logitech's lightweight WFH headset with a noise-canceling boom mic, 18-hour battery, and multipoint Bluetooth — built for back-to-back meetings, not music.
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What we like
- Featherweight 185g build is comfortable through a full workday
- Flip-to-mute boom mic is far more predictable on calls than earbuds
- Multipoint Bluetooth pairs to laptop and phone simultaneously
- Up to 18 hours of talk time on a charge
- Memory foam earpads stay comfortable in long sessions
Could be better
- No active noise cancellation — passive isolation only
- 40mm drivers sound fine for calls, mediocre for music
- USB-A receiver sold separately (Zone Vibe 125 includes it)
- Plasticky build feels cheaper than the price suggests
Full Review
The Zone Vibe 100 is Logitech’s answer to a specific question: what if your headset only had to be good at meetings? It’s a stripped-down WFH headset that does one job well and skips the audiophile pretensions of the Zone Vibe 125 and Zone Wireless 2.
Build and Comfort
At 185 grams, this is one of the lightest over-ear headsets you can buy. The earcups are oval memory foam — softer than the on-ear pads Logitech used on older Zone models — and the headband has just enough clamping force to stay put without squeezing your temples.
The plastic build is the giveaway on the price. There’s no metal in the headband and the earcup hinges feel hollow. It doesn’t creak in use, but you wouldn’t toss it in a backpack without a case. For a desk-bound headset, that’s a reasonable tradeoff.
Microphone and Call Quality
The boom mic is the whole point. It’s noise-canceling, flips up to mute (with a satisfying click and an audible chime), and sits close enough to your mouth that your voice lands clean without sounding compressed. Coworkers can tell the difference between this and AirPods immediately.
This is also where it earns the price over earbuds. AirPods Pro 2 use beamforming mics inside the stem — fine in a quiet room, mediocre with a fan running, a baby crying, or any reverberant space. A boom mic three inches from your face doesn’t have that problem.
Sound and Daily Use
Music is the weak spot. The 40mm drivers are tuned for voice clarity, which means thin bass and rolled-off highs. Podcasts and meetings sound great. Spotify sounds like a $50 headset, because that’s roughly what the audio side is.
Multipoint Bluetooth is the killer feature for daily use — connect to your laptop and phone simultaneously, take a call on either, and audio routes automatically. 18 hours of talk time means you charge it twice a week, not nightly like earbuds.
Zone Vibe 100 vs. AirPods Pro 2 for Calls
If your meetings are under 30 minutes and happen in a quiet room, AirPods Pro 2 are fine. The mic is acceptable, the comfort is unbeatable, and you already own them.
Switch to the Zone Vibe 100 when: meetings regularly run over an hour (ear fatigue), your background isn’t quiet (kids, HVAC, coworking space), or you need predictable mic quality every single call. The boom mic doesn’t have an off day. AirPods do.
Who Should Buy This
Buy the Zone Vibe 100 if you live in video calls, want a dedicated mic that’s better than any earbud, and don’t need it to double as your music headphones. If you want one device that handles meetings and music well, spend the extra $50 on the Zone Vibe 125 or pair this with cheap wired headphones for music. If audio quality matters more than mic quality, this isn’t the headset — look at the Sony WH-1000XM5 instead.