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We Asked 2,000 US Hearing Aid Users to Rate Their Purchase. Here's How Every Brand Ranked.
Published by Healthy Living Digest | Health | Last update: Apr 11 | 👁 11,203 | 📖 4 min
Every year, millions of people in the US buy hearing aids. Most of them have no idea whether they got a good deal.
We wanted to change that.
Over the past six months, we collected feedback from 2,147 US hearing aid users.
We asked them to rate their hearing aids across five categories: sound quality, comfort, value for money, battery life, and whether they'd recommend them to a friend.
We also asked one question that no hearing aid company wants you to think about:
"Knowing what you know now, would you buy the same hearing aids again at the same price?"
The answers surprised us. Some of them will make you angry.
Medicare Coverage
Let's get this out of the way first. Medicare Part B has never covered hearing aids. Not once in 60 years. You pay into the system your entire working life, and the one thing you actually need, they won't cover.
Some Medicare Advantage plans offer limited hearing benefits, but they typically cap at $500–$1,000 — nowhere near enough for quality devices. And the restrictions, network requirements, and paperwork make it barely worth the effort.
Most people we surveyed found out the hard way: you're on your own.
"I paid into Medicare for 45 years. They won't cover a dime for hearing aids. It's criminal."
— Susan, 72, Ohio
"My Medicare Advantage plan covered $600. The hearing aids cost $4,500. That's not coverage."
— Dennis, 70, Florida
Our verdict
Medicare doesn't cover hearing aids. Period. Most people we surveyed had no idea until they needed them.
Miracle-Ear — Average price: $4,995
387 users surveyed
The technology is good. We're not going to pretend it isn't. But the hearing aid itself — the receiver, the chip, the microphone — costs about $80 to $100 to manufacture.
The rest of that $4,995? The clinic on Main Street. The sales staff on commission — and yes, most clinic audiologists earn a percentage of what they sell you. That's why they almost always recommend the premium range first.
The area manager. The head office. The television ads.
You're not paying $5,000 for a hearing aid. You're paying $5,000 for the privilege of buying it in a nice chair.
"The hearing aids are excellent. The price is criminal."
— Colin, 72, Texas
"I paid $4,200. My husband nearly had a heart attack. We cancelled our trip to Florida to cover it."
— Margaret, 76, Ohio
"The audiologist spent ten minutes on the hearing test and forty minutes on the sales pitch. Premium range, obviously."
— Brian, 71, Pennsylvania
Our verdict
The technology is good. Nobody disputes that. But when we asked users if they'd pay the same price again, less than a third said yes. The most common response: "I feel overcharged."
Costco Kirkland — Average price: $1,499
298 users surveyed
Cheaper than Miracle-Ear. Similar markup structure. Their aftercare package covers the first year — after that, you're paying per visit.
The biggest issue our users flagged: Costco locks you into their ecosystem. Adjustments, repairs, replacements — all through Costco. Move house or your store closes and you start again from scratch. Plus you need a Costco membership just to buy them.
"Cheaper than Miracle-Ear. Still felt like a lot for what you get."
— Keith, 71, Arizona
"My son looked up what the components actually cost to manufacture. He hasn't spoken to me about it since."
— Arthur, 77, Michigan
Our verdict
A step down from Miracle-Ear in price but a similar experience. Value for money scored poorly despite being cheaper than Miracle-Ear.
Amazon Hearing Devices — Average price: $54 Avoid
412 users surveyed
We need to be clear about this: what Amazon sells are not hearing aids. They are amplifiers.
An amplifier makes everything louder — voices, traffic, the fridge, your own breathing — all at the same volume. It cannot separate speech from background noise. That's why voices stay muffled while everything else gets painfully loud.
A real hearing aid has a digital processing chip that filters sound. That chip alone costs around $80. If you're buying a complete device for $39, that chip is not in there.
What you're getting is a speaker and a battery in a plastic shell. Potentially dangerous. Risk of further hearing damage from unfiltered loud noise.
If you've tried Amazon and given up, you weren't trying hearing aids. You were trying amplifiers. Please don't let that experience put you off.
"Absolute junk. Everything was louder but nothing was clearer. Sent them back."
— Derek, 69, Ohio
"I bought three different pairs over two years. All the same. Loud, screechy, painful. Gave up on hearing aids entirely."
— Terry, 72, Indiana
"My doctor told me they're not actually hearing aids. They're amplifiers. Different technology completely."
— Susan, 65, Virginia
Our verdict
Avoid. If you've tried Amazon and given up, you were trying amplifiers. Don't let that experience put you off real hearing aids.
Modern Hearing — $249 Best Buy
436 users surveyed
This is the one that surprised us. When we first included Modern Hearing, we expected another Amazon-style amplifier with better marketing. $249 for a pair of hearing aids didn't seem possible.
We were wrong. They use Knowles receivers — the same supplier Miracle-Ear and Costco use. Same digital processing chips. Proper multi-channel sound filtering, not amplification.
Federally registered as a medical device. Same certification standard as every hearing aid sold in clinics.
Founded by David Taylor. His father was in his seventies, struggling with his hearing, couldn't afford the clinic prices on Social Security, and Medicare wouldn't cover a dime.
Taylor had worked in the hearing aid industry. He knew what the components actually cost. Warehouse in New Jersey. Same components as the big brands. No clinic, no commission, no markup. That's the $249.
Rechargeable. Fully invisible. 45-day trial — send them back if they're not right. Two-year guarantee.
In our testing, most users couldn't tell the difference between Modern Hearing and hearing aids costing ten times more.
"TV volume went from 50 down to 8. Wife can't believe it."
— Robert, 78, Pennsylvania
"I paid $4,200 at HearingLife two years ago. These are better. I'm not joking."
— Colin, 72, Texas
"Tried OTC aids from Walgreens for six months. Put them in a drawer after three days with these."
— Roy, 74, Ohio
"Completely invisible. My buddy sat next to me for an hour and didn't notice."
— Malcolm, 70, North Carolina
"Rechargeable. No batteries. No fumbling over the sink every Monday morning. That alone was worth $249."
— Dave, 73, Columbus
Our verdict
96% would buy again. The highest of any hearing aid we've ever tested. Same technology as the clinics. A fraction of the price. No clinic, no waiting list, no markup. Just hearing aids that work, delivered to your door.
The Overall Rankings
★★★★★ — Same tech as clinics. No markup. $249
★★★★☆ — Good technology, poor value $4,995
★★★☆☆ — Locked ecosystem, membership required $1,499
★☆☆☆☆ — Doesn't cover hearing aids N/A
★☆☆☆☆ — Not hearing aids. Amplifiers. $54
"Knowing what you know now, would you buy again at the same price?"
That tells you everything you need to know.
Important Update
Since this article was published, Modern Hearing has gained tremendous attention and interest.
The company has reached out to our editorial team to inform us that, for a limited time, they are offering our readers an exclusive 50% discount on Modern Hearing.
Plus, every order comes with a 45-day risk free trial at home, 1 year warranty and free insured shipping.
If you don't experience clearer hearing within 45 days, you can just return it.
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