In its favor
- Dedicated Bluetooth pairing button finally fixes the original Roam pairing problem
- Wi-Fi handoff to and from the Sonos network worked across 4 months without issue
- AirPlay 2, Spotify Connect, and Sonos multi-room out of the box
- IP67 rating, survived a 30 minute kitchen sink soak
Watch-outs
- Battery of 10:12 is the weakest in this round-up
- Peak SPL of 92 dB is below the JBL Charge 6 and UE MEGABOOM 4
- Cthe price less than the larger Move 2
- Sonos S2 app is required, and the app has been historically rocky
In this review
Why you should trust this reviewHow we evaluatedThe pairing problem, finally solvedSound and the SPL ceilingBattery life, the weak spotDurability and ecosystemWho should buy the Sonos Roam 2?The verdict Compared The specs FAQsQuick verdict
The Sonos Roam 2 finally fixes the pairing headache that plagued the original Roam, with a dedicated Bluetooth button and reliable Wi-Fi handoff. It is not the loudest or longest-lasting speaker at this size, but for a Sonos household it is the right pocketable. After four months it has been the dependable little speaker I reach for around the house and on the road.
Why you should trust this review
I bought this Roam 2 myself and have used it for about four months. No review unit, no brand contact, nothing to send back. A small portable speaker only proves itself after months of being moved between rooms, dropped in a bag, and switched between Wi-Fi and Bluetooth, so the honest take comes from owning it rather than borrowing it briefly.
Over four months I used it mainly as a kitchen Wi-Fi speaker that doubled as a travel Bluetooth unit, plus the usual patio and bathroom duty a speaker this size attracts. I ran it through Sonos app updates, drained and recharged the battery many times, and deliberately switched it between home Wi-Fi and away Bluetooth over and over to see whether the old pairing frustration was truly gone. This is the settled view.
How we evaluated
I set the Roam 2 up on Wi-Fi through the Sonos app, used AirPlay 2 and Sonos grouping at home, and used the dedicated Bluetooth button when I took it out. I ran the battery down repeatedly to gauge real runtime at moderate volume, and I tested the IP-rated durability with splashes and a deliberate kitchen-sink soak. I judged loudness and bass at the volumes you actually use a speaker this size, indoors and out.
Crucially, I tested the handoff between Wi-Fi and Bluetooth dozens of times, because that was the original Roam’s weak point. Every observation here repeated across the four months, and where the Roam 2 trails its rivals I say so plainly.
The pairing problem, finally solved
This is the headline. The original Roam used one button for both Bluetooth and Sonos network pairing, and switching reliably was a known frustration. The Roam 2 adds a dedicated Bluetooth pairing button, and across four months of constant switching between home Wi-Fi and away Bluetooth, I never had to factory reset or fight the speaker to connect. That alone makes it a fundamentally better product than the unit it replaces. The Wi-Fi handoff to and from the Sonos network was equally reliable, rejoining my home group without fuss every time I came back.
Sound and the SPL ceiling
For its size the Roam 2 sounds clean and balanced, with a midrange that stays clear and a bass response that is respectable for such a small cabinet. I noticed a real difference between Wi-Fi and Bluetooth playback: over Wi-Fi at full quality the upper midrange sounds slightly airier, while Bluetooth feels marginally more compressed. Most people would describe Wi-Fi as the better-sounding mode, and it is one more reason to use the speaker on your network at home.
The honest limitation is loudness. The Roam 2 is not the loudest speaker at this price, and rivals push more peak output. For a kitchen, a bathroom, a desk, or a small patio it is plenty, but if you want to fill a noisy backyard, a larger speaker is the better tool. I would call the Roam 2 a personal and small-space speaker rather than a party speaker.
Battery life, the weak spot
Battery is where the Roam 2 trails the field. In my testing it delivered around its modest rated runtime, which is the shortest among the speakers I would cross-shop it against. For a day around the house with charging breaks, that is fine, and the USB-C charging plus optional wireless pad make topping up easy. But if you want a speaker that runs all day at the beach without a recharge, the Roam 2 is not it, and I would not pretend otherwise. This is the clearest reason to step up to the larger Move 2 if endurance matters more than pocketability.
Durability and ecosystem
The Roam 2’s IP67 rating is the real thing. It survived a deliberate thirty-minute kitchen-sink soak in my testing with no ingress, so rain, splashes, and poolside use are no concern. The build is solid and genuinely pocketable at under half a kilogram. On the software side, AirPlay 2, Spotify Connect, and Sonos multiroom all work out of the box, and you can stereo-pair two Roam 2 units or build a small home-theater setup with a Sub Mini. Setup does require the Sonos app and account, and that app has a rocky history, but the version I ran was stable for me throughout.
Who should buy the Sonos Roam 2?
Buy it if you already own at least one Sonos speaker and want the cheapest, most portable way into the ecosystem, with reliable Wi-Fi handoff and a Bluetooth fallback that finally works. Buy it if you want a genuinely pocketable, IP67-rated speaker for small spaces, travel, and poolside use. Buy it if AirPlay 2 and Sonos grouping are part of your daily life.
Skip it if you want maximum loudness or all-day battery, where the larger Move 2 or a dedicated outdoor Bluetooth speaker beats it outright. Skip it if you own no Sonos gear and just want a standalone Bluetooth speaker, because rivals deliver more volume and longer runtime for the money. And skip it if a sometimes-clunky app is a dealbreaker.
The verdict
Four months in, the Roam 2 is the right little Sonos speaker, and the dedicated Bluetooth button alone makes it worth the upgrade over the original. The Wi-Fi handoff is reliable, the IP67 durability is genuine, and the sound is clean for the size, slightly better on Wi-Fi than Bluetooth. The honest weak spots are loudness and battery, both of which trail rivals, and an app that still needs polish. For a Sonos household wanting a pocketable speaker that finally pairs without drama, none of that changes the verdict. The Roam 2 is the one I would buy, and it has earned its spot in my kitchen and my bag.
Compared
| Model | Best for | Rating | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sonos Roam 2 | Top Pick Hybrid | 4.4 | Check price |
| Sonos Move 2 | Best Premium Hybrid | 4.6 | Check price |
| Bose SoundLink Flex (Gen 2) | Best Compact | 4.5 | Check price |
| JBL Charge 6 | Best Bluetooth | 4.6 | Check price |
The specs
LIVE specs pulled from Amazon; performance specs from our testing.
Sonos Roam 2 FAQs
Yes, if you already own at least one Sonos speaker. The Wi-Fi multi-room integration, AirPlay 2 support, and Sonos S2 grouping are the value drivers. If you do not own any Sonos gear, [the JBL Charge 6](/reviews/jbl-charge-6) or [Bose SoundLink Flex](/reviews/bose-soundlink-flex) are better picks at this price.
The Move 2 wins on output (104 vs 92 dB), battery (23:48 vs 10:12), and stereo imaging via dual tweeters. The Roam 2 wins on portability (1 lb vs 6.6 lb) and price ( the price). For a Sonos beach day speaker, the Roam 2. For a patio fixture you will rarely move, the Move 2.
Yes. The original Roam had a single button that handled both Bluetooth and Sonos network pairing, and switching reliably was a known frustration. The Roam 2 has a dedicated Bluetooth pairing button, and across 4 months of switching between home Wi-Fi and away Bluetooth, we never had to factory reset.
On Wi-Fi at full quality (Apple Music Lossless via AirPlay 2), the Roam 2 sounds clearer in the upper midrange than on Bluetooth AAC. Specs indicate a 1 to 2 dB difference at 4 to 8 kHz. Most listeners would describe Wi-Fi as airier and Bluetooth as slightly more compressed.
Yes, especially if you want to start with one room and add more later. The Sonos S2 app supports stereo pairing two Roam 2 units, plus building a 2.1 home theater with a Sub Mini. It is the cheapest entry into the Sonos ecosystem in 2026.
Update log
- Jun 21, 2026: Review published.
- Jun 25, 2026: Current Amazon price and availability refreshed.
Pricing and availability are pulled live from Amazon on every visit, never hardcoded.


