Mojo Review

First Impression

Kiwi Ears Belle

What can $29 do to my Aural Cranial Frequency Funnels?

Reviewed by @mojo

Form factor
IEM (universal)
Price
USD 29
Value
Exceptional

The Verdict

Product links: https://kiwiears.com/products/kiwi-ears-belle Headfi.org: https://www.head-fi.org/showcase/kiwi-ears-belle-universal-iem.28719/
Pros:
Great price and value Neutral tuning so suited to a wide variety of styles (and listeners) Bass slams when called for Smooth and balanced mids Relaxed and mellow when needed to – very song/genre-specific
Cons:
3.5mm cable (but they are only $29!) Not the end word in detail Treble can be a bit “safe” (good for some though)
Conclusion: These are for any new-comers who don’t feel like upgrading for a while. These would suit many people for quite some time, as they really showcase the style and sound of your music. Mellow on smoother tracks, punchy and exciting with EDM, Electronic and just plain satisfying with rock and metal. Very good set of budget iems which won’t take on the big boys, but they don’t need to. Highly recommended, especially for the price. Thanks Rosie, for the opportunity to review the new Kiwi Ears Belle iems- it’s been fun!

Works Best With

BluesBlues
Classical / OrchestralClassical / Orchestral
CountryCountry
Dance / EDMDance / EDM
Drum & Bass / BreakbeatDrum & Bass / Breakbeat
Electronic (general)Electronic (general)
Folk / Singer-SongwriterFolk / Singer-Songwriter
Hip-hop / RapHip-hop / Rap
House / TechnoHouse / Techno
JazzJazz
LatinLatin
ReggaeReggae
MetalMetal
PopPop
Punk / HardcorePunk / Hardcore
R&B / SoulR&B / Soul
RockRock
Trance / ProgressiveTrance / Progressive
Reggae / DubReggae / Dub
World / GlobalWorld / Global

Listening Journey

Preamble: The good folks at KiwiEars (Rosie) have kindly sent out the Belle iems for review with no expectations of a positive review – and that’s exactly what they’re getting. The Belles retail for just $29 USD. I have to note here, I have reviewed many iems of late, some $20 USD, some $700 USD and I have some coming that will dwarf the $700 USD price tag……..insanity! Look at my ratings please, on just about all my reviews……… 4/5, 4.5/5 - see a pattern??? First up, rating out of just 5 points is virtually impossible (to explain the reviewer’s complete thoughts). 10 is hard but better, 100 is perfect to really break down the nuances within each category! I have reviewed SO many great iems recently at ALL price points, and most of them were excellent, some very good and some just astonishing. There hasn’t been a bad one for a LONG time, in fact I think 3 ½ stars is the lowest I have given in a long time. I know I’m so repetitive with my scores but technology has improved at an outstanding rate. Excellent quality iems can be made for under $100 USD and even much cheaper. Yes, you can tell the difference between more expensive examples but sheer value for money in 2026 is just insane!! Keep reading please…… I like to add on all my reviews – I’m listening with my Side‑Mounted Tweeter Pods, not yours. I’m listening with my gear, not yours. I’m listening with my love of audio, and not yours. YMMV….. Now let’s get our aural hands dirty! Gear: For the review, my portable gear consists of the new Hiby R6S Pro II 2025 (review very soon - get excited!) Unboxing and first impressions: Very simple, small box, akin to many other brands of late. Open it up to see a pair of black iems and another box which houses a white 3.5mm cable and 2 sets of tips in 3 sizes. Nothing special but for $29, everything as expected. In the interest of fairness, I only use 4.4mm cables into my balanced Daps, so I switch out for my KBEar Aureus cable). They are a simple looking iem but for the price, that’s fine. They fit well inside my soundstage sideflaps and the stock tips sound great. The Important Stuff: Gone Gone Gone starts and it sounds great. I had never heard the song (thanks David H!!). It’s punchy, snappy with saxophones, clapping out reasonably wide left to right. Everything is separated well and bass is quite deep and well controlled. From Electronic straight to Mongolian throat-singing folk metal…… Again, it’s punchy and sounds are well separated. Treble is present but maybe just a tad laid back (which will please a HUGE cohort of listeners). Vocals are clean, clear and not in my face. Everything gels well. Cohesion. This an exciting song on the Belles. Megadeth next (you knew there’d be Mustainian metal!!). Treble is opening up here. Mustaine’s clean and crisp vocals shine. Detail and clarity are actually front and centre on this track. Guitars are punchy and bass is present and well controlled. Not ocean-floor deep, but still very good. The taps on the side of the drums are very clean and obvious. A new Leppard track - AWESOME!!!! I’m as happy as a sh*# in pig!!!!!! Great song too-damn. Vocals are front and centre here. Joe sounds natural and powerful. Treble is definitely there but it’s not crisp or sibilant. Bass is decent without going into sub-bass levels. I would hazard a guess that these are a fairly neutrally tuned pair of iems (to my Cranial Stereo Shovels, anyway). Still fun and punchy but no real peaks in any of the frequencies. On Valhalla Calling, everything just sounds good. There isn’t any other way to describe it. Bass is decent, mids are smooth and treble is nicely present. There is a nice naturalness to them. There’s also no bleed between frequencies that I can hear. I finish with and Electronic powerhouse – Make Us Stronger. This tests separation, balance, dynamics, ALL frequencies and sheer excitement. Bass here seems to go deeper than on previous tracks and it’s more powerful by quite a margin. It’s clean with no bleed, just like Aunty Jemima’s strawberry jam scones (perfection!!!). Mids (synths, vocals) are really nice and balanced and treble is again present (there’s plenty of detail up top) but nothing is harsh or sibilant. This is a GREAT song on the Belles and I’m sure the Hiby R6 Pro II 2025 is driving them beautifully. What I’m understanding about the Belles is that they are song and genre-dependent. When the song is mellow, they play it safe. When deep bass is called for, they do actually slam. On some songs, treble is up front and clean, on some it’s takes a slight back-step and plays 2nd fiddle to the mids. Mids seem to be consistently smooth though – not once did I hear any shouty or honky vocals and they were never recessed either. Staging is very good left to right, and separation is equally good. I never heard a mish-mash of sounds, I could always distinguish where a sound was inside my Dolby Atmos Dome. A quick comparison (or 2): The obvious comparison here is the recently reviewed KZ ZS12 PRO 2s- https://www.head-fi.org/showcase/【k...version-for-gamers.28709/reviews#review-41244. I listen on the Hiby with both running 4.4mm balanced cables. Keep in mind, the KZs are twice the price of the Belles ($60 vs $29). Make Us Stronger – a really punchy and dynamic listen on the Belles. Deep, staging and separating well, with clear, clean treble and balanced mids. Very nice! On the ZS12 PRO 2s, It’s actually a very similar listen. The punch, the excitement, the bass – it’s all there. But staging is out wider, and separation is better placed inside my Cranial Soundstage Generator on the ZS12s. On I’m Good (Blue), again, staging and separation are just ahead on the ZS12 Pro 2s but really, the Belles are doing a really awesome job for just $29 – I’m very impressed.
MO

Written by

@mojo

@mojo · View Profile

Discussion

Comments are coming soon. Share your thoughts on this review with the Sonic Compass community.

Sign in to be notified when discussions open for this review.