Thu 09 Jul 2026 / 09:07 ET
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Skullcandy sale cuts earbuds, gaming headset and speakers

WIRED’s July deals page lists discounts on Skullcandy audio gear, including open earbuds, a gaming headset and compact Bluetooth speakers.

Dana Voss

By Dana Voss / Security Correspondent

Skullcandy sale cuts earbuds, gaming headset and speakers
img: WIRED

Skullcandy is running discounts on several audio products, according to WIRED’s July 2026 deals coverage, with the clearest cuts landing on open-ear earbuds and a gaming headset. For shoppers, the useful bit is less the coupon-page confetti and more the product-level math: WIRED lists the Push 720 open earbuds at 35 percent off and the Crusher PLYR 720 gaming headphones at 33 percent off.

The page also carries the usual affiliate-commerce caveat. WIRED says its editors independently choose featured products, but the publication may receive compensation from retailers or purchases made through its links. That does not make the discounts fake, but it does mean the sales pitch is also a revenue stream. Consumer tech commerce is many things; spiritually pure is not one of them.

What is discounted

WIRED points readers first to the Skullcandy Push 720 open earbuds. Open-ear designs are built for people who want audio without fully blocking outside sound. WIRED frames them as useful for activities such as exercising outdoors or doing yard work, where hearing a car horn or someone calling out can matter.

There is a small wrinkle in the presentation: WIRED’s section heading describes the Push 720 discount as 33 percent, while the body text says the earbuds are 35 percent off. The more precise claim in the product description is 35 percent, but the mismatch is a reminder to check the cart before treating a promo page as gospel.

For gaming, WIRED highlights the Skullcandy Crusher PLYR 720 headphones at 33 percent off. The feature called out is a swivel-based microphone, intended to make voice chat easier during online play. No performance testing, latency figures, microphone measurements or platform compatibility details are given in the deal copy, so buyers looking for those specifics will need to consult the product listing or reviews.

Rewards and speakers

WIRED also points to Skullcandy’s broader sale section for headphones, earbuds and speakers. The deals page recommends checking Skullcandy coupon codes, which it says change regularly. No specific active code is identified in the available deal text beyond the advertised sale percentages.

Skullcandy’s rewards program is pitched as another way to reduce costs. WIRED says the program is free to join and includes free shipping on orders over $49, special offers, rewards, early access to some product releases and monthly product giveaways. New members receive 25 points toward a future reward, and purchases add more points that can be redeemed for discounts, according to the deal page.

The company is also promoting two pocket-size Bluetooth speakers under the Session line. WIRED describes the Session 360 as a palm-sized model with a skate wheel-inspired design, a strap, a magnetic mount, a waterproof build and up to 20 hours of battery life. The Session 540 is described as another compact rugged speaker that can strap to gear or attach magnetically, with 17 hours of battery life.

The bottom line from the available information is narrow but useful: Skullcandy has sale pricing on a handful of consumer audio products, and WIRED is steering readers toward both the discounts and its coupon system. The page does not provide full comparative testing or detailed specs, so the deal is the story, not a verdict on whether these are the best headphones or speakers in their categories.

This story draws on original reporting from WIRED.

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