Review: Sonos Ray Is the Ideal Soundbar for Small Spaces

It’s a compact, minimalist unit that foregoes features for simply great sound

Sonos Ray white soundbar

The new Sonos Ray soundbar is a $279 upgrade for your TV

By Kirk Miller

Nota bene: If you buy through the links in this article, we may earn a small share of the profits.

I’ve owned a Sonos Beam for a few years now, and I paired it with two Sonos One speakers for a simple plug-and-play surround sound experience. My one complaint about this setup is that occasionally dialogue gets lost and volume can be all over the place (which really is more on the streaming service I’m using than the soundbar). Overall, it’s a great, somewhat affordable and very easy-to-use home theater system.

Honestly, I didn’t think I needed an upgrade to the new Sonos Ray — and what I learned testing one of these soundbars out for a few weeks is that it isn’t necessarily an upgrade, but more of an alternative for people like, well, actually me. As in, a New Yorker with not of space who has two TVs in two different rooms (which, in NYC, can sound weirdly fancy. Two rooms? Two TVs? Get out of here, Elon.)

The Ray launched in June, and I went to a pre-launch demo in Manhattan and also tested a unit out at home on the smaller (43”) of two sets in the house. Given that the unit is being touted as “clearer, more powerful audio than you’d ever expect from a small standalone soundbar,” I chose not to pair it with additional Sonos speakers and simply try it as a standalone unit.

The specs:

A size comparison between the Sonos Arc, Beam and Ray
Sonos

What works:

What kind of works:

What needs work:

Putting a Sonos Ray soundbar on our writer’s media console
Kirk Miller

Final thoughts:

Simply put, your TV will sound better and you’ll be able to bring a quality music speaker into your room with the Ray — and you can pair it with other Sonos products if you wish, but it doesn’t seem necessary; I found I didn’t miss the surround sound aspect of our Sonos Beam/One living room setup. Overall, you may pay a little more for soundbar that, on the surface, offers a few less features. But the Ray will fit — literally and figuratively — comfortably in your life for years to come. 

Exit mobile version