Sonos Launches New Arc Soundbar With Dolby Atmos Support - MacRumorsOpen MenuShow RoundupsShow Forums menuVisit ForumsOpen Sidebar
Skip to Content

Sonos Launches New Arc Soundbar With Dolby Atmos Support

Sonos today announced the Arc, a new $799 premium soundbar option that features Dolby Atmos support and AirPlay 2 compatibility. The Arc replaces the Playbar, with Sonos also discontinuing the Playbase.


Available in black or white, the Arc features a curved grille, with its longer 45-inch design aimed at users who have large TVs. Sonos says the Arc can be mounted discreetly or placed on top of furniture.

The Arc is equipped with 11 drivers to provide multi-directional audio, along with 8 elliptical woofers, 3 silk-dome tweeters, and a far-field microphone array for voice assistant activation (it supports Google Assistant and Alexa). Arc tuning was done with Oscar-winning sound engineers to emphasize the human voice, ideal for use with TV shows and movies.

sonosarc1
Sonos' Trueplay software tunes the Arc to the acoustics of the room that it's in, while the app provides adjustable EQ settings. A night mode reduces the intensity of loud sound effects.

Sonos has also introduced the new $699 third-generation Sonos sub and the $499 Sonos Five, which is designed to replace the Play:5.

sonosarc2
Along with the new products, Sonos today announced the upcoming launch of its S2 app, which will work with the new Arc, Sonos Five, and Sonos Sub, along with other Sonos devices. The S2 app includes support for higher resolution audio like Dolby Atmos, plus it features improved security and a revamped design.

The new Sonos app will work with most products, but it leaves behind the original Play:5, Zone Players, Gen 1 Connect devices, the CR200, and the Bridge.

Sonos plans to release the Arc on June 10, and it will be compatible with the Sonos S2 app when it launches. The Arc is available for pre-order on the Sonos website as of today, as are the Sonos Sub and Sonos Five.

Tag: Sonos

Popular Stories

sonos logo

Sonos App Currently Unavailable on iOS and Mac App Stores [Updated]

Friday May 22, 2026 3:16 am PDT by
The Sonos app is currently unavailable to download on the iPhone and Mac App Stores owing to a mysterious problem that the company is currently looking into. The app disappeared as of about two hours ago, and the app's URL link currently throws up the message: "The page you're looking for can't be found," while a manual search in the App Store returns no results. A red banner across the So...
macOS 27 on MacBook Pro

Apple Says macOS 27 Won't Be Compatible With These Macs

Wednesday June 3, 2026 8:29 am PDT by
During WWDC 2025, Apple revealed that macOS 26 Tahoe would be the final major macOS version for Intel-based Macs. macOS 27 will be compatible with Apple silicon Macs only, meaning that you will need a Mac with an M-series chip or a MacBook Neo with an A18 Pro chip in order to install the software update. Apple will unveil macOS 27 during its WWDC 2026 keynote this Monday, June 8, and the...
MacBook Neo on Yellow Feature

MacBook Neo is So Popular That Apple Reportedly Doubled Production

Wednesday June 3, 2026 9:24 am PDT by
On an earnings call in late April, Apple's CEO Tim Cook said that customer response to the MacBook Neo was "off the charts," and the popularity of the laptop has reportedly led the company to significantly boost production. Apple supply chain analyst Ming-Chi Kuo this week said he believes that MacBook Neo shipments to Apple were doubled from an initial target of 5 million units to 10...

Top Rated Comments

79 months ago
Still 802.11b/g, 2.4 GHz... it's *17* years old wi-fi tech...
Score: 13 Votes (Like | Disagree)
imnotthewalrus Avatar
79 months ago

I'd buy an Apple soundbar but it would probably cost $3,999.

Me too, maybe they would discount it down to $3,499 :)

Well, yeah, and then another $1000 for the optional wall mount.

Hahahahaha yeah! It's one thing if it contained $3,999 worth of technology, but with Apple it'd be like $100 worth of tech at most.
Only on Macrumors can a non-Apple related thread turn into an Apple bashing thread.
Score: 11 Votes (Like | Disagree)
79 months ago

I'd buy an Apple soundbar but it would probably cost $3,999.
Well, yeah, and then another $1000 for the optional wall mount.
Score: 11 Votes (Like | Disagree)
macduke Avatar
79 months ago
I'd buy an Apple soundbar but it would probably cost $3,999.
Score: 6 Votes (Like | Disagree)
sideshowuniqueuser Avatar
79 months ago

Still 802.11b/g, 2.4 GHz... it's *17* years old wi-fi tech...
True, but it doesn't need to be any faster, it's only transferring audio, not 4K video streaming to 10 devices. Putting faster wifi won't increase performance, but will increase price. All wifi routers/cards have backwards compatibility, and 802.11b/g isn't going to disappear anytime soon.
Score: 5 Votes (Like | Disagree)
bodonnell202 Avatar
79 months ago

Did they really remove the optical inputs on these?
I imagine it's the same as the Beam (which I have) - there's only an HDMI port on the Beam, but it comes with an HDMI to optical adapter (which plugs into the HDMI port on the Beam) so you can use optical if your TV doesn't have an HDMI ARC port.

Edit: I stand corrected, the adapter plugs into the optical port on your TV, at which point you can use the included HDMI cord to connect to the TV. With the Beam everything I needed was in the box, so I imagine it will be the same for the ARC.
Score: 4 Votes (Like | Disagree)