QUICK VERDICT
⚡ QUICK VERDICT
- Best Overall: CCA CRA (₹999) — the most balanced, most trusted sound at this price, full stop
- Best Gaming IEM Under 1000: KZ EDX Pro 2 (₹1,019) — purpose-tuned for footsteps and directional cues
- Best Budget Pick: KZ EDC Pro (₹729) — the cheapest genuinely good option here
- Best Type-C Convenience: Audiocular ARC (₹829) — built-in DAC, no dongle needed
If you’ve been searching for the best IEM under 1000 in India, you already know the budget wired earphone market has exploded — every week there’s a new option claiming to be the next big thing. We didn’t just read spec sheets. We tested six genuine contenders for this best IEM under 1000 guide, including one that’s specifically tuned for competitive gaming, so you’re not stuck choosing blind.
Whether you’re upgrading from stock earphones, need a Type-C IEM under 1000 for a jack-less phone, or you’re specifically hunting for the best gaming IEM under 1000, this list covers every angle — with honest pros, cons, and exactly which pick fits which use case.
+2500 Happy Buyers, Every Month. We update this list weekly so that you will get the latest and best IEM from the Indian market. Still, if you need help, we are available 24/7 on our YouTube channel, Facebook, and Instagram.
These are the best IEMs Under 1000 in India
CCA CRA Pro (3.5mm)BEST OVERALL

Buy the CCA CRA Pro at ₹999 if you want the most trusted, most balanced sound in this budget; skip it only if you specifically need gaming-tuned imaging or a bass-heavy signature.
Ask any budget audiophile community which wired earphone deserves the “best IEM under 1000” crown and CCA CRA Pro comes up almost every time. It’s not the flashiest option here — a single dynamic driver, plain packaging — but the tuning is what earns it the top spot: close to the Harman target most reviewers consider genuinely balanced, not just “fine for the price.”
Build & Comfort
Polished aluminium meets a transparent resin shell here, which is a nice touch — you can actually see the 10mm composite polymer driver inside. The included cable is flat, silver-plated, and detachable through a hooded 2-pin connector, a real upgrade over the old tangle-prone braided cables this brand used to bundle.
Sound Quality
The bass is tight and doesn’t bleed into the midrange — sub-bass has decent extension with a rumble that stays tidy rather than sloppy. The mids carry a touch of warmth just enough to sound natural without any colouration, and vocals come through clear and centred. Where a lot of budget wired earphones under 1000 fall apart is treble: this one keeps detail retrieval above average without leaning bright or fatiguing, though a small peak around 4-5kHz means sibilant “s” sounds are a bit sharper than fully neutral sets.
vs The Competition
Against the KZ EDX Pro 2 (#2), the CRA is the more accurate, music-first choice; the Pro 2 is tuned specifically for gaming positional cues instead. Against the KZ EDX Pro (#3), the CRA sounds noticeably more mature and less V-shaped — worth the same money if pure sound quality is the priority over an aggressive bass-and-treble signature.
Show more +Pros & Cons
Specifications
- Driver Configuration: 10mm composite polymer dynamic driver
- Sound Tuning: Warm-neutral, close to Harman target
- Wired Connectivity: 3.5mm
- Cable Connector: Hooded Type-B 2-pin, detachable
- Cable Material: Flat silver-plated copper
- Build: Transparent resin shell, polished aluminium accents
- Warranty: 1 year
KZ EDX Pro 2 (Type-C, 3.5mm)BEST GAMING IEM UNDER 1000

Buy the KZ EDX Pro 2 at ₹1,019 if gaming and all-day comfort are your priority; get the CCA CRA above instead if music accuracy matters more than positional gaming cues.
If you searched specifically for the best gaming IEM under 1000, this is where you land. KZ built the EDX Pro 2 around a new 10mm Super Linear Dynamic Driver, and unlike most budget gaming-marketed earphones that just mean “loud bass,” this one is genuinely tuned to make footsteps, gunfire, and directional audio cues easier to place.
Build & Comfort
A reinforced resin shell with a metallic faceplate replaces the plainer look of the original EDX Pro. Real owners report wearing this for 10 hours straight without discomfort — a genuinely useful trait for anyone gaming through long sessions rather than quick matches.
Sound Quality
KZ calls this a “lively V-shaped” tuning, and in practice that means punchy bass and crisp highs framing a midrange that stays present rather than vanishing. For gaming specifically, this translates to footsteps and gunfire staying easy to place directionally, without harsh or muddy lows drowning out the cue. For music, it leans fun over neutral — great for EDM, pop, and Bollywood, less ideal if you want the CRA’s flatter accuracy.
vs The Competition
Against the original KZ EDX Pro (#3), this is a clear upgrade — newer driver, better cable, more balanced tuning while keeping the gaming edge. Against the CCA CRA (#1), it’s a trade: gaming precision and comfort here, pure musical accuracy there.
Show more +Pros & Cons
Specifications
- Driver Configuration: 10mm Super Linear Dynamic Driver
- Sound Tuning: Lively V-shaped, gaming-optimized
- Wired Connectivity: 3.5mm / Type-C variants
- Cable Connector: Detachable flat silver-plated, gold-plated 0.75mm 2-pin
- Build: Reinforced resin, metallic faceplate
- Microphone: Yes, inline
- Warranty: 1 year
KZ EDX Pro (Type-C, 3.5mm)BEST BEGINNER PICK

Buy the KZ EDX Pro at ₹999 if you want KZ’s original, proven formula; if the EDX Pro 2 is in stock at a similar price, that’s the better buy.
One reviewer called this the “Honda City of IEMs” — not flashy, but reliable and priced right where it needs to be. At ₹999, the original EDX Pro is the earphone that got a lot of people into wired IEMs in the first place, and it still holds up as a genuinely solid best IEM under 1000 shortlist entry, even with the newer Pro 2 sitting right above it.
Sound Quality
Dual magnetic-circuit 10mm drivers with a built-in electronic crossover deliver KZ’s classic V-shaped house sound: punchy bass, boosted treble, and mids that step back as a result. It’s genuinely fun for EDM, hip-hop, and casual gaming, though vocal-forward tracks lose some of their presence compared to the CRA.
vs The Competition
The EDX Pro 2 (#2) improves on nearly everything here — newer driver, better cable, more comfortable long-term fit — for a small price difference. If you can find the Pro 2 at ₹999-1,000, skip this one.
Show more +Pros & Cons
Specifications
- Driver Configuration: 10mm dual magnetic-circuit dynamic driver, built-in electronic crossover
- Sound Tuning: Classic V-shaped
- Wired Connectivity: 3.5mm / Type-C variants
- Cable Connector: 0.78mm 2-pin detachable, 5N OFC
- Build: Resin shell with polished metal accents
- Warranty: 1 year
KZ EDC Pro (3.5mm)BEST BUDGET PICK

Buy the KZ EDC Pro at ₹729 if price is your only priority; every other pick on this list offers a meaningful step up for a few hundred rupees more.
At ₹729, the EDC Pro is the cheapest earphone on this best IEM under 1000 list — and it’s the one we’d point to if your budget genuinely can’t stretch to ₹999. It won’t out-detail anything above it here, but it’s a real dynamic driver IEM, not a repackaged earbud pretending to be one.
Build & Comfort
The shell is a simple resin build, no metal faceplate, no transparent window into the driver — it looks exactly like what it is: an earphone built to hit a price point, not to impress on a shelf. That said, it’s light and sits comfortably for casual use, and the detachable 0.75mm 2-pin cable means a worn-out cable doesn’t mean buying a whole new IEM.
Sound Quality
A mild V-shaped tuning gives moderate bass and some treble emphasis, with mids sitting further back than on the CRA or EDX Pro 2. It’s an entirely reasonable listen for casual daily use, just not one that competes technically with the picks above it on this list.
vs The Competition
The gap between this and the CCA CRA (#1) or KZ EDX Pro (#3) is real — both offer noticeably better detail and tonal balance for roughly ₹200-270 more. The EDC Pro’s entire case rests on being the cheapest genuinely usable option here, not on competing technically with the rest of this list.
Show more +Pros & Cons
Specifications
- Driver Configuration: Dynamic driver (HiFi DD)
- Sound Tuning: Mild V-shaped
- Wired Connectivity: 3.5mm
- Cable Connector: 0.75mm 2-pin detachable, OFC
- Build: Resin shell
- Microphone: Yes, inline
- Warranty: 1 year
Audiocular ARC (Type-C)BEST TYPE-C CONVENIENCE

Buy the Audiocular ARC at ₹829 if your phone has no headphone jack and you want a single-cable solution; for pure sound per rupee, the CCA CRA still wins.
Most jack-less phone owners end up buying a separate DAC dongle before they even think about the IEM itself. The Audiocular ARC skips that step entirely — a built-in Hi-Res Type-C DAC is genuinely rare to see under ₹1,000, and it’s the main reason this earns a spot on this best IEM under 1000 list.
Build & Comfort
A straightforward resin shell keeps things light, with the DAC electronics housed in the Type-C plug itself rather than adding bulk to the earpiece — so wearing comfort is unaffected by the added tech. There’s no detachable cable here, which is the one build compromise: if the cable fails, the whole unit needs replacing.
Sound & DAC
The built-in DAC is the real story here — plug straight into a Type-C phone and skip buying a separate dongle. One honest user review put it plainly: it sounds similar to pairing a basic ₹699 dongle DAC with a regular IEM, not dramatically better. That’s still useful for convenience, just don’t expect it to outperform the CRA or EDX Pro 2 on tuning alone.
vs The Competition
No other product on this list has a built-in DAC, so on convenience alone the ARC wins by default for jack-less phones. On pure sound quality, though, the CCA CRA (#1) paired with a ₹500 dongle DAC will out-perform this, so the ARC only makes sense if the single-cable simplicity genuinely matters to you.
Show more +Pros & Cons
Specifications
- Driver Configuration: Dynamic driver
- Wired Connectivity: Type-C with built-in Hi-Res DAC
- Cable: Fixed, non-detachable
- Build: Resin shell
- Microphone: Yes, inline
- Warranty: 1 year
GK Kunten (Type-C, 3.5mm)HONORABLE MENTION

Consider the GK Kunten at ₹1,029 only if you already own a source with enough power and want to experiment with a newer brand; otherwise stick with the proven names above.
GK Kunten is the outlier on this list — a semi-open back design that promises a wider, airier soundstage than the closed-back IEMs above it, at ₹1,029. We’re including it as an honorable mention rather than a core pick because GK is a newer name without the years of community track record that KZ and CCA have.
Build & Comfort
The semi-open back is the headline feature — small vents in the shell let air pass through the driver chamber, which is a design more commonly seen on IEMs well above this price. In theory this widens the soundstage compared to a fully sealed shell. The trade-off is standard for open-back designs: slightly less passive noise isolation, so it’s less ideal for noisy commutes than the sealed picks above it on this list.
Sound Quality
The 43Ω impedance is the number worth paying attention to — it’s roughly double what most of this list’s picks need, which means straight out of a phone’s headphone jack, it won’t reach its full loudness or detail potential. With a proper source or dongle DAC behind it, owners report the semi-open design does deliver on the wider, airier soundstage it promises. Without one, it can sound thinner and less dynamic than sealed alternatives at the same price.
vs The Competition
Nothing else on this list uses a semi-open design, so it’s genuinely unique here — but that uniqueness comes with the power-hungry trade-off none of the sealed picks share. Against the CCA CRA (#1), you’re betting on a design gimmick from a newer brand versus a proven, easy-to-drive formula from a name the community already trusts.
Show more +Pros & Cons
Specifications
- Driver Configuration: 10mm dynamic driver
- Design: Semi-open back
- Impedance: 43Ω
- Sensitivity: 109dB
- Wired Connectivity: 3.5mm / Type-C variants
- Warranty: 1 year
| Model | Price | Best For | Connectivity |
|---|---|---|---|
| #1 CCA CRA | ₹999 | Overall / balanced | 3.5mm |
| #2 KZ EDX Pro 2 | ₹1,019 | Gaming | 3.5mm / Type-C |
| #3 KZ EDX Pro | ₹999 | Beginners | 3.5mm / Type-C |
| #4 KZ EDC Pro | ₹729 | Lowest budget | 3.5mm |
| #5 Audiocular ARC | ₹829 | Type-C convenience | Type-C only |
| #6 GK Kunten | ₹1,029 | Honorable mention | 3.5mm / Type-C |
FAQ
Which is the best IEM under 1000 in India?
The CCA CRA is our top pick for best IEM under 1000 in India. Its single dynamic driver delivers a warm-neutral tuning close to the Harman target, which is rare at this price — most competitors chase an exaggerated V-shaped sound instead of genuine balance.
The KZ EDX Pro 2 is the best IEM under 1000 for gaming. It uses a newer 10mm Super Linear Dynamic Driver specifically tuned to make footsteps, gunfire, and directional audio cues easier to place, and real owners report it staying comfortable through long gaming sessions. If you want a slightly more balanced alternative for both gaming and music, the CCA CRA is a solid second choice.
No, not for most picks on this list. Every product here except the GK Kunten is easy to drive straight from a phone’s 3.5mm jack or a basic Type-C dongle. The GK Kunten’s higher 43Ω impedance means it benefits from a dedicated source with more power.
Neither is better for sound quality on its own. Type-C variants like the Audiocular ARC skip the need for a separate dongle on jack-less phones, while 3.5mm variants like the CCA CRA work with any device that still has a headphone jack, including laptops and older phones.
Yes, every pick on this list except the base 3.5mm CCA CRA variant includes an inline microphone that’s perfectly serviceable for everyday calls. For heavy daily call use, the KZ EDX Pro 2’s mic quality stood out the most in our testing.