Tom's Guide curates 11 best Prime Day gaming headset deals under $40

Headsets that were expensive last month are suddenly affordable
Amazon Prime Day discounts on gaming audio have reached all-time lows across multiple brands and price points.

Once a year, the marketplace briefly inverts its usual logic — the premium becomes accessible, and the considered purchase becomes the impulsive one. Amazon's Prime Day has delivered that inversion to the world of gaming audio, with headsets from Razer, SteelSeries, Sony, and others dropping 30 to 50 percent, some to prices never seen before. For the gamer who has been waiting for the right moment, the waiting may be over.

  • Several gaming headsets have hit all-time low prices, creating a narrow window that rewards those paying attention and punishes hesitation.
  • The discounts span every tier — from a $32 Razer BlackShark V2 to a $228 Sony Inzone H9 — meaning no budget is left without a compelling option.
  • Inventory at these prices is likely limited, and the sale is still unfolding, adding a quiet urgency beneath the otherwise routine rhythm of online shopping.
  • Brands that dominate serious gaming setups — SteelSeries, HyperX, Logitech, Sony — are all represented, signaling this is not a clearance of lesser goods but a genuine compression of value.

Amazon's Prime Day has opened with an unusually generous hand toward gamers, rolling out headset discounts that began early and have already reached historic lows for several models. Whether you play on PC, PlayStation 5, Xbox, or Nintendo Switch, the sale has something worth pausing for.

At the entry level, the Razer BlackShark V2 has fallen to $32 from its usual $59 — nearly half off — while the Kraken V3 X sits at $44. These aren't compromise purchases; they're capable headsets now priced like budget ones. The mid-range tells a similar story: the SteelSeries Arctis Nova 1 at $44, the HyperX Cloud III at $77, and the Logitech G535 Lightspeed at $79 are all models that appear in serious gaming setups, now priced as if they don't.

The premium tier has shifted too. The SteelSeries Arctis Nova 5 — considered among the best available — is $119, down from $149. The Sony Inzone H9, Sony's flagship, dropped from $329 to $228. The Logitech G Astro A50 wireless headset, normally $299, is now $237.

What gives this sale its particular weight is that many of these prices are the lowest ever recorded for these models. That detail matters: it suggests limited inventory and a window that won't stay open. More deals are expected as Prime Day continues, but the signal is already clear for anyone who has been watching and waiting.

Amazon's Prime Day sale has arrived with a particular gift for anyone who games: headsets that cost less than they did last week. The discounts started rolling in early, and if you play on PC, PlayStation 5, Xbox, or Nintendo Switch, there are deals worth your attention right now—some of them hitting prices lower than they've ever been.

The entry point is surprisingly low. A Razer BlackShark V2, which normally sells for fifty-nine dollars, is now thirty-two. That's nearly half off. If you want to spend a bit more, the Razer Kraken V3 X sits at forty-four dollars, down from sixty-nine. These aren't throwaway budget headsets either; they're models that actually perform, which is why the discounts matter. You're not settling for worse audio to save money—you're getting legitimate gear at a fraction of its usual price.

The mid-range tier opens up more options. The SteelSeries Arctis Nova 1 dropped to forty-four dollars from fifty-nine. The HyperX Cloud III, which normally costs ninety-nine dollars, is now seventy-seven. The Logitech G535 Lightspeed fell from one hundred nineteen to seventy-nine. These are the headsets that serious gamers actually use—the ones you see in streams, the ones that show up in reviews as solid all-around choices. At these prices, they're almost impossible to pass up.

If you're willing to spend more, the premium models have gotten interesting too. The SteelSeries Arctis Nova 5, which the guide identifies as one of the best gaming headsets available, is now one hundred nineteen dollars—thirty dollars off its regular price of one hundred forty-nine. The Arctis Nova 7 sits at one hundred nineteen as well, down from one hundred ninety-nine. The Sony Inzone H5 is one hundred twenty-eight, and the H9, Sony's flagship model, dropped to two hundred twenty-eight from three hundred twenty-nine. The Logitech G Astro A50, a wireless option that normally costs two hundred ninety-nine dollars, is now two hundred thirty-seven.

What makes this sale notable is not just the depth of the discounts—many of them are thirty to fifty percent off—but that several have already hit all-time lows. That's the kind of detail that matters if you've been watching prices. It suggests these deals won't last forever, and it suggests that inventory at these prices is probably limited. The sale is still ongoing, and more discounts are expected as Prime Day continues, but the pattern is clear: if you've been thinking about upgrading your gaming audio, the moment is now. The headsets that were expensive last month are suddenly affordable, and the affordable ones are almost free.

Many of these deals have already hit an all-time low price
— Tom's Guide editor
A Conversa do Hearth Outra perspectiva sobre a história
Inventor

Why does a gaming headset sale matter enough to write about? Aren't these just consumer products on discount?

Model

Because for a lot of people, audio is the last thing they upgrade. They'll spend money on a monitor or a graphics card but keep using whatever headset came with something five years ago. These deals remove that excuse.

Inventor

But why these brands? Why Razer and SteelSeries and not others?

Model

Because they're the ones that actually work. They show up in professional gaming setups, in reviews, in streams. When a SteelSeries headset that costs one hundred fifty dollars normally drops to one hundred nineteen, that's not a gimmick discount—that's a real opportunity.

Inventor

The article mentions all-time lows. What does that signal?

Model

It signals scarcity. When a product hits its lowest price ever, retailers are usually trying to clear inventory or they're taking a loss to drive traffic. Either way, it won't last. People who wait will miss it.

Inventor

Is there a best choice in this list, or does it depend on the person?

Model

It depends on what you're doing and what you're willing to spend. But if you're starting from nothing, the Razer BlackShark at thirty-two dollars is almost impossible to justify not buying. That's not a compromise price—that's a steal.

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