Caldwell E-Max Pro
The E-Max Pro is the muff I recommend to most shooters. NRR 23, dual electronic microphones, low-profile design that does not bump into a rifle stock, and AAA battery life that runs for 350 hours. Audio compression cuts impulse noise above 85 dB while letting normal conversation through clearly. The padding is comfortable for full range sessions and the headband adjustment holds its setting.
I shoot a lot and I have worn most of the Caldwell electronic earmuffs in their lineup. Here are the five worth your money for the range and beyond.
I shoot rifles for fun and have spent years at outdoor ranges, indoor pistol bays, and hunting setups. Caldwell makes a wide range of earmuffs that punch above their price point, but the lineup is confusing. Here are the five I would recommend depending on what kind of shooter you are.
| Earmuff | NRR | Electronic | Best For |
| — | — | — | — |
| Caldwell E-Max Pro | 23 dB | Yes | Best all-around |
| Caldwell E-Max Shadow | 23 dB | Yes, low-profile | Best for long guns |
| Caldwell Passive Muffs | 31 dB | No | Highest NRR passive |
| Caldwell E-Max Power Cords | 25 dB | Yes, behind-the-head | Helmets and hats |
| Caldwell Youth E-Max | 22 dB | Yes | Best for kids |
How we evaluated these
We compare every pick against the field on real specifications, certifications, and aggregated owner reviews. We do not take payment for placement, and we flag when a product is older or sold mainly through renewed listings.
The shortlist
| Pick | Best for | Score | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Caldwell E-Max Pro | 23 dB | Check price | |
| Caldwell E-Max Shadow | 23 dB | Check price | |
| Caldwell Passive Muffs | 31 dB | Check price | |
| Caldwell E-Max Power Cords | 25 dB | Check price | |
| Caldwell Youth E-Max | 22 dB | Check price |
Each pick, examined
Caldwell E-Max Pro
The E-Max Pro is the muff I recommend to most shooters. NRR 23, dual electronic microphones, low-profile design that does not bump into a rifle stock, and AAA battery life that runs for 350 hours. Audio compression cuts impulse noise above 85 dB while letting normal conversation through clearly. The padding is comfortable for full range sessions and the headband adjustment holds its setting.
Caldwell E-Max Shadow
The Shadow is the slim-cup version of the E-Max for shooters who run rifles or shotguns. The reduced cup depth means your cheek weld on the stock is not pushed off to the side. NRR drops slightly to 23 dB at the body but the practical noise cut on long guns is the same as the Pro. Same dual electronic mics, same battery life. If you shoot mostly long guns, this is the one.

Caldwell Passive Muffs
When you need the highest possible noise reduction and you do not need to hear range commands, the Caldwell passive NRR 31 muffs are excellent. No batteries, no electronics to fail, and the noise reduction is genuinely better than any electronic muff at the same price. Pair with foam plugs for indoor pistol ranges where the muzzle blast off concrete walls is brutal.
Caldwell E-Max Power Cords
The Power Cords are behind-the-head electronic muffs designed for use with hard hats, ear protection helmets, or hunting hats with brims. NRR 25 thanks to the in-ear style cups. Audio amplification through both ears, audio jack input for radio or phone, and the behind-the-head band stays out of the way of a rifle stock or a hard hat brim. The audio jack is useful in tree stands.

Caldwell Youth E-Max
Kids need hearing protection too, and adult-size earmuffs do not seal on small heads. The Youth E-Max has a smaller adjustable headband, lighter cups, and the same dual-mic amplification as the adult versions. NRR 22 is plenty for outdoor youth shooting. My kids started with these at age six and they have been the only muffs that actually fit properly through their early shooting years.
Questions answered
If you shoot with others, yes. Electronic muffs let you hear conversation and range commands while still cutting impulse noise from shots. Passive muffs are fine for solo target practice but miserable at a busy range.
NRR 22 is the minimum I would consider, 25 to 30 is better. Outdoor rifle ranges are loud but indoor pistol ranges are punishing. Pair muffs with foam plugs for indoor ranges if you want to truly protect your hearing.







