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Best Overall
Amazon Echo (4th Gen)
Best for the Bedroom
Amazon Echo Dot With Clock (5th Gen)
Best for Kids
Amazon Echo Dot Kids Edition (5th Gen)
The Best Non-Amazon Speaker
Sonos Era 100
Amazon’s family of Alexa-enabled devices is vast. From the spherical Echo to the swiveling Echo Show 10, you can get Alexa into your home in many ways. These devices can answer your questions, help you order essentials, set timers, play all sorts of audio content, and even function as the control hub for your growing smart home. These are our favorite Echo- and Alexa-compatible speakers for every home and budget.
The best time to buy any Amazon speaker is during a major sale event like Black Friday or Amazon Prime Day, as there usually are steep discounts. If you’re trying to decide which smart devices might be best for you, be sure to check out WIRED’s picks in our roundups: Best Smart Speakers, Best Smart Displays, and Best Bluetooth Speakers. We also have guides on setting up your Echo speaker, creating Alexa routines, and Alexa skills that are actually fun and useful to help you get started.
Updated June 2023: We’ve updated pricing throughout this buying guide.
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Photograph: Amazon
Best Overall
Amazon Echo (4th Gen)
Amazon’s fourth-generation Echo (8/10, WIRED Recommends) notably changed the shape of the cylindrical speaker into a speaker ball. Unless you have a personal vendetta against Amazon (you might), this is the best smart speaker you can get for around $100. Amazon has dialed in its digital signal processing and sound quality over the previous three Echos, and the rounded edges here help fidelity. The new Echo comes with Amazon’s AZI Neural Edge processor too, which helps Alexa recognize speech better than ever.
It works in any room in the house. Use it in the kitchen for recipes and timers, in the bedroom for news and weather, or in the bathroom for shower sing-alongs. It’s compact, sounds decent, and is well-suited to everything you’d want a smart speaker to do. If music quality is your priority, scroll to the Echo Studio and Sonos speakers below, which are our favorite Alexa speakers for listening to music. It’s worth noting that since Amazon launched a fifth-gen Echo Dot in 2022, there’s a chance we’ll see a fifth-gen Echo this year, but with layoffs to the Alexa department, there’s no guarantee.
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Photograph: Amazon
Best for the Bedroom
Amazon Echo Dot With Clock (5th Gen)
I’ve had an Echo Dot with Clock on my bedside table for years, and it’s the best alarm clock ever. You can easily check the time in the middle of the night, thanks to the forward-facing digital clock, and it wakes me up with my favorite seasonal playlists. I have it tell me the weather as I’m getting dressed too. It’s also great in the kitchen, where the display can show the status of a timer.
The fifth-gen Dot is the latest and comes in two models—one with a clock and one without. It looks similar and round, like the standard Echo (our top pick), which means the Dot projects audio even further. However, you’ll probably need a bigger speaker if you want to enjoy anything other than background music while you dress or cook.
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Photograph: Amazon
Best for Kids
Amazon Echo Dot Kids Edition (5th Gen)
This special edition of the Echo Dot is nearly identical to the fifth-gen Dot above, but it has easy-to-use parental controls that allow you to set time limits, filter explicit content, and review activity. The owl- or dragon-colored sphere comes with a year of Amazon Kids+, which includes thousands of Audible books and other special games and features. After that, you’ll be charged $3 per month. Alexa can help your kids spell, play their favorite music, or—via another speaker in your house—remind them of dinner time. Echo also has the new Show 5 Kids, a smart display with parental controls, but we have yet to test it.
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Photograph: Sonos
The Best Non-Amazon Speaker
Sonos Era 100
If your budget can stretch and you want something that does a bit more than Amazon’s own offerings, Sonos’ latest smart speaker (9/10, WIRED Recommends) is the best you’ll find. Our favorite smart speaker now comes with dual tweeters for stereo, has better mics than some of Amazon’s leading speakers, and can be used with virtually any streaming service (and even Google Assistant, if you prefer it).
You should also consider the new Sonos Era 300 (9/10, WIRED Recommends), which can function as an Alexa speaker. It supports spatial audio, but it’s much larger and more expensive.
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Photograph: Sonos
Best Portable Speaker
Sonos Roam
This portable speaker from Sonos (9/10, WIRED Recommends) works great in Bluetooth mode, but if you hook it up to your home’s or vacation spot’s Wi-Fi, you can use it as a portable Alexa speaker. I like to use it to set timers in the kitchen and check the weather on trips to the Oregon coast, and it saw lots of cabin time in the Cascades during a recent winter. This little speaker fits easily in a car cupholder, and it comes with an IP67 dust- and water-resistance rating, so you won’t need to worry about dropping it in the mud.
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Photograph: Bang & Olufsen
Another Good Portable Speaker
Bang & Olufsen Beosound A1 (2nd Gen)
The Beosound A1 is a durable, beautiful, and great-sounding listening companion that I’ve taken everywhere from ski trips to backyard barbecues with barely a scratch on its metal grille. The second-generation A1 brought Alexa integration, making it easy to use your voice to change songs if it’s connected to the internet. An IP67 rating means you won’t have to worry about taking it anywhere, and with 18 hours of playtime, you won’t be reaching for the charger often. The nifty strap lets you attach it to your backpack or wrist, too. I still prefer the Sonos Roam (it’s cheaper), but if you’ve got the cash and want a bit more bass, the A1 is great.
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Photograph: Amazon
Best Display
Amazon Echo Show 8 (2nd Gen)
The Echo Show 8 has been our favorite smart display for Alexa for two generations in a row for good reason. We like this size more than the 5- and 10-inch versions, the smaller of which felt like a weird smartphone, the larger like a weird tablet that spins around everywhere. This one’s like Goldilocks’ perfect porridge; it’s big enough that weather updates, video chats, and recipes show up clearly, but compact enough that it doesn’t take up too much valuable countertop space. The 2021 model is nearly identical to the old one but has a much better camera and it can function as a security or baby monitor.
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Photograph: Amazon
Best Buds
Amazon Echo Buds (2021)
We liked the old Echo Buds, but we’re even bigger fans of the 2021 version (8/10, WIRED Recommends). Amazon’s earbuds come with wireless charging, noise-canceling tech, and a surprisingly ergonomic fit. Better microphones mean that Alexa voice controls work even in loud environments. The overall experience of using the headphones feels like a future we’ve seen in sci-fi movies. Need to set a timer, check the weather, or see what happened with your favorite sports team? Just ask these earbuds. Keep in mind that you’ll find better wireless earbuds in our guide, but these are great if you really want Alexa in your ears.
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Photograph: Amazon
Best for Sound
Amazon Echo Studio
Amazon’s Echo Studio is for anyone who wants the biggest, boldest sound they can get from an Alexa device. It’s got 350 watts of power and a downward-firing subwoofer that pumps out more low end than most other speakers this size, and it even listens and adjusts the sound to fit your space. There’s an upward-firing midrange speaker in addition to two side-facing ones, which makes the Echo Studio capable of playing 3D audio codecs like Dolby Atmos. In fact, the speaker automatically “upmixes” your music from standard stereo to better fill your space. You can buy two and pair them to create a soundbar-like Dolby Atmos experience, though I’d probably stick with a standard Atmos soundbar.
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Photograph: Yamaha
Best Alexa Soundbar
Yamaha ATS-2090
The Yamaha YAS-209, also called the ATS-2090, is a soundbar/wireless subwoofer combo that doubles as a smart speaker for your living room. Alexa is inside, as well as two virtual sound modes, two HDMI ports, Wi-Fi, Spotify Connect, and Bluetooth, which makes it exceptionally easy to use. It also sounds quite good for the price, which is why it’s one of our favorite soundbars.
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Photograph: Sonos
Best Compact Soundbar
Sonos Beam (Gen 2)
The Sonos Beam is also another great Alexa soundbar because of how compact and easy it is to use. The small, pill-shaped bar will seamlessly work with any other Sonos speakers you have, and you can play music on it when you aren’t bingeing Netflix. It sounds amazing no matter what audio is coming out of it, and it goes head to head with soundbars that are much larger. As it’s made by Sonos, you can switch over to Google Assistant, should you ever decide Amazon’s ecosystem isn’t right for you.
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Photograph: Joseph Shin
For More Bass
Amazon Echo Sub
If you’ve got some small Echo speakers around the house but their bass output isn’t scratching your itch, consider adding an Echo Sub. This wireless subwoofer can easily integrate with any Amazon-made speaker and can do wonders for bringing out your favorite bass lines—or for annoying your downstairs neighbors.