Hearing Aids

Hearing Aids

Find the right hearing aid with our expert reviews, honest brand comparisons, and plain-English buying guides. Tested by real people, written for seniors.

4 Reviews 11 Guides Updated March 2026

We know hearing aids can feel overwhelming. There are dozens of brands, confusing tech specs like "channels" and "gain," and prices that range from $300 all the way to $8,000 a pair. Add in the question of whether you even need a prescription anymore, and it's no wonder so many people put the decision off for years.

Here's the good news: the hearing aid market has changed dramatically. Since the FDA approved over-the-counter hearing aids in 2022, you can now buy a quality pair online — no audiologist visit required — and have them working at your kitchen table the same day. For most people with mild-to-moderate hearing loss, an OTC device between $300 and $1,000 will genuinely improve daily life.

What actually matters when choosing? Sound quality in noisy environments (not just quiet rooms). Comfort during long wear — because a hearing aid that hurts after two hours stays in a drawer. Bluetooth connectivity if you want to stream phone calls or TV audio. And rechargeable batteries versus disposables, which is a bigger quality-of-life difference than most people expect.

Our team has reviewed 16+ brands and tested every device in real-world conditions — restaurants, family gatherings, grocery stores, grandkids' baseball games. Below you'll find our honest picks, detailed brand reviews, and plain-English guides to help you make a confident choice. No jargon, no pressure, just the information you actually need.

Key Takeaways

  • OTC hearing aids (no prescription needed) now start under $300 and work well for mild-to-moderate hearing loss — you don't need to spend thousands.
  • Comfort matters more than features. If a hearing aid isn't comfortable for 10+ hours, you won't wear it. Always use the full trial period before deciding.
  • Rechargeable batteries save hassle and money. Most modern hearing aids last 16–20 hours per charge, so you just drop them in the case at night.
  • Bluetooth is worth it if you take phone calls or watch TV often — streaming audio directly to your ears is a game-changer for clarity.
  • Prescription hearing aids are still the right choice for severe-to-profound hearing loss. If OTC devices aren't cutting it, see an audiologist.

Our Top Picks

These are the hearing aids we'd recommend to our own family members. Every pick has been hands-on tested by our review team.

Not sure where to start?

If you're feeling stuck between brands or aren't sure whether you need OTC or prescription, we're here to help. Email us at [email protected] and one of our team members will get back to you with a personal recommendation.

Brand Reviews

In-depth, hands-on reviews of the hearing aid brands seniors ask us about most. Every review includes real-world testing, pricing breakdowns, and our honest take.

Buying Guides & Comparisons

Plain-English guides that answer the questions people actually ask — from insurance and Medicare coverage to head-to-head brand matchups.

Guide

How to Clean Hearing Aids: A Complete Care Guide

How to clean and care for your hearing aids. SeniorsList covers tools, daily routines, and tips for BTE, RIC, and in-ear styles.

Read guide
Guide

Eargo Hearing Aid Prices and Models: 2026 Buyer's Guide

Current Eargo hearing aid prices for 2026. Compare the Eargo Link, SE, and 8 by cost, battery life, features, and water resistance. Is Eargo worth it?

Eargo Link Eargo SE Eargo 8
Read guide
Guide

Does Insurance Cover Hearing Aids? A Complete Guide for 2026

Does your insurance cover hearing aids in 2026? SeniorsList covers Medicare Advantage, Medicaid, VA benefits, state mandates, and assistance programs.

Read guide
Guide

MDHearing Hearing Aid Prices and Models: 2026 Buyer's Guide

Full MDHearing price guide for 2026. Compare AIR, NEO, NEO XS, VOLT, and VOLT MAX by cost, battery life, and features. Is MDHearing worth it?

MDHearing AIR MDHearing NEO MDHearing NEO XS MDHearing VOLT MDHearing VOLT MAX
Read guide
Comparison

Oticon vs. Eargo: Which Hearing Aid Is Right for You?

Oticon vs. Eargo compared by SeniorsList. See how prescription Oticon stacks up against OTC Eargo on price, performance, and features.

Oticon Eargo
See comparison
Guide

Medicare and Hearing Aids: What's Covered in 2026

Does Medicare cover hearing aids in 2026? SeniorsList breaks down Original Medicare, Medicare Advantage, and Medigap coverage for hearing aids.

Read guide
Guide

Oticon Hearing Aid Review 2026: Cost, Models, and What to Expect

SeniorsList's 2026 Oticon review. Compare Intent, Real, Zircon, Xceed, and Own by price, features, and hearing loss level.

Oticon
Read guide
Comparison

Phonak vs. Eargo: Prescription Power vs. OTC Convenience

SeniorsList compares Phonak vs. Eargo in 2026. See how prescription Phonak measures up against OTC Eargo on price, features, and support.

Eargo Phonak
See comparison
Guide

Phonak Hearing Aid Review 2026: Cost, Models, and Expert Assessment

SeniorsList's 2026 Phonak review. Compare Lyric, Naida Lumity, and Audeo by price, features, and hearing loss level. Is Phonak worth it?

Phonak
Read guide
Comparison

ReSound vs. Eargo: Prescription vs. OTC Hearing Aids Compared

SeniorsList compares ReSound vs. Eargo in 2026. See differences in price, connectivity, support, and which brand fits your hearing loss.

ReSound Eargo
See comparison
Guide

Signia Hearing Aid Review 2026: Cost, Models, and What to Know

SeniorsList's 2026 Signia review. Compare Styletto IX, Pure Charge&Go IX, and Silk Charge&Go IX on price, features, and fit.

Signia
Read guide

How We Test and Review Hearing Aids

Every hearing aid on this page goes through real-world testing by our review team. We wear each device for a minimum of two weeks across a range of environments — quiet conversations at home, noisy restaurants, outdoor walks, phone calls, and TV streaming. We evaluate sound quality, comfort over extended wear, battery life, app usability, and customer support responsiveness.

We also factor in what matters most to our readers: value for the price, ease of setup (especially for people who aren't tech-savvy), and return policies. A generous trial period isn't just a nice perk — it's essential, because the only real way to know if a hearing aid works for you is to live with it for a few weeks.

Have a question our guides don't answer? Reach out to us at [email protected]. We read every message and we're always happy to help.

Ready to Hear Better?

Whether you're exploring hearing aids for the first time or upgrading an older pair, our team is here to help you find the right fit — no pressure, no sales pitch.

Get Personalized Recommendations