Save up to ₹30,000 on Rechargeable Hearing Aids

Hearing aids by price

What each price band actually gets you

Here's the short version. In India a single hearing aid runs from about Rs 15,000 to Rs 2,00,000 per ear. The extra money mostly buys clearer hearing in noise, Bluetooth and rechargeability, and more automatic adjustment. Below, each tier is laid out plainly — who it suits and what's inside — with 0% EMI and one honest note about spending wisely. Prices are approximate and quoted per ear.

The four price tiers

Each band below is per ear and approximate. Read the 'who it suits' line first — the right tier follows your ears and your daily life, not the biggest number.

Rs 15,000–35,000 / ear

Entry digital

Who it suits: first-time users, mild to moderate loss, a mostly quiet home life, a tight budget. What you get: proper digital processing tuned to your hearing test, usually a handful of channels, basic noise reduction and a couple of manual programs. Most run on small button batteries with limited or no Bluetooth. An honest starting point, not a toy.

Rs 35,000–70,000 / ear

Mid-range

Who it suits: people who go out, work, take calls and want real value. Moderate loss and mixed surroundings. What you get: more channels, better automatic noise handling, directional microphones, Bluetooth streaming to your phone, and usually rechargeable batteries. For most people this is the sweet spot where comfort and clarity meet a sensible price.

Rs 70,000–1,20,000 / ear

Premium

Who it suits: a busy social or work life — restaurants, meetings, travel — and tougher listening where you want the aid to adjust on its own. What you get: many channels, faster automatic scene changes, sharper speech in noise, hands-free calls, app control and rechargeability. You mostly pay for how well it copes when the room gets loud.

Rs 1,20,000–2,00,000 / ear

Ultra-premium AI

Who it suits: demanding listeners and professionals in genuinely difficult, noisy places who want the latest. What you get: AI-driven processing that adjusts moment to moment, the best speech-in-noise the brand offers, top rechargeability and full streaming, with motion or health sensors on some models. Worth it only if your ears truly need this much — for calmer routines the gains shrink fast.

What the jargon on the price tag means

Higher prices come with more of these. Here's what each one does, in plain words.

  • Channels: think of them as separate volume dials across different pitches. More channels let the audiologist shape sound to your exact loss. Entry aids have a handful; premium aids have many.
  • Noise handling: cheaper aids turn noise down bluntly. Dearer aids tell speech from clatter and keep voices clear in a crowd. This is the single biggest thing you pay more for.
  • Bluetooth: streams phone calls, music and video straight into your ears. Common from mid-range upward.
  • Rechargeable: drop the aids on a charger at night instead of fiddling with tiny batteries. Standard on most mid-range and above.
  • Directional microphones: focus on the person in front of you and soften sound from behind. They get sharper as you move up the tiers.

Paying over time, and trying before you pay

Yes, you can spread the cost. A good aid doesn't have to be one big payment.

  • 0% EMI: split the cost over several months with no interest added, on most models across every tier.
  • Try before you pay: a free 45-minute hearing test and a 5–7 day home trial come first. If the aid doesn't suit you, return it.
  • One ear or two: you only pay for the ears that need help. We'll tell you honestly which.
  • Brand-neutral: we fit Signia, Phonak, Oticon, Widex, ReSound, Starkey, Unitron and Interton, so the choice fits you, not a sales target.

An honest note before you spend

Two or three things we say to almost everyone who walks in.

  • Fitting beats price. A mid-range aid matched to your test, checked and adjusted by an audiologist will outperform a premium aid set up in a hurry. The person fitting the aid matters as much as the aid itself.
  • Under about Rs 10,000 is usually an amplifier, not a hearing aid. These make everything louder — background noise included — and aren't tuned to your loss. Used long-term they can leave you straining. If a price looks too good, ask what it actually is.
  • Don't over-buy. If your days are calm and quiet, ultra-premium AI may be more than your ears will ever use. Buy for the life you actually live.

Frequently asked questions

What's the cheapest genuine hearing aid?

An entry digital aid starts around Rs 15,000 per ear. That's a real hearing aid — tuned to your hearing test, with digital processing and some noise reduction. Anything under about Rs 10,000 is usually a plain amplifier that makes everything louder, background noise included, without matching your loss. For a mild loss and a quiet routine, a well-fitted entry aid is a fair place to start.

Can I pay in EMI?

Yes. We offer 0% EMI on most models, so you split the cost over several months with no interest added. It works across the tiers, including entry and mid-range aids. Bring a card that supports EMI and we'll help you set it up at the clinic. You still get the free hearing test and the home trial first, so you only commit once you know the aid suits you.

Is a more expensive hearing aid always better?

No. Price mostly buys better performance in noise and more automation, which helps if your days are busy and loud. In a quiet home, a mid-range aid can sound just as good to you as a premium one. What matters more is the fitting — a mid-range aid tuned properly will beat a premium aid set up carelessly. Match the aid to your ears and your life, not to the top of the price list.

Is the price per ear or per pair?

The ranges we quote are per ear. Most people with loss in both ears do better with two aids, because your brain uses both sides to place sound and follow speech in noise. So a pair costs roughly double a single aid. If only one ear needs help, you pay for one. We'll tell you honestly at the test whether you need one aid or two.

How do I know which tier I need?

The honest answer comes from a hearing test, not a price chart. Your audiologist checks how much loss you have and in which pitches, then asks about your days — work calls, restaurants, TV, how quiet or noisy life gets. A mild loss in a calm routine may need only an entry or mid-range aid. A busy, noisy life leans premium. The 45-minute test and home trial let you hear the difference before deciding.

Start with a free hearing test

Before you look at any price, find out what your ears actually need. Book a free 45-minute hearing test at our clinics in Pune (Viman Nagar), Delhi (Rohini and Green Park) or Bengaluru (Jayanagar). Try your aids at home for 5–7 days and pay only if they suit you. Call +91 9429690093.

Take the first step

Ready to Hear Clearly Again?

Book your comprehensive hearing assessment with our senior audiologists — free of cost, no obligation.