Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Audio / Video
  3. How tos

How to connect headphones to an Amazon Fire TV device

Add as a preferred source on Google
A trio of Amazon Fire TV remote controls held in a hand in front of a television.
Phil Nickinson / Digital Trends

Whether you own an Amazon Fire TV Stick, Fire TV Cube, or a Fire TV-powered smart TV (perhaps one made by Amazon!), you’ll know just how robust the Fire TV platform is. Packed with features, customizations, and an immense library of movie and TV show content, one of your Fire Stick’s more low-key capabilities is called private listening.

Recommended Videos

Difficulty

Easy

Duration

5 minutes

What You Need

  • An Amazon Fire TV Stick, Fire TV Cube, or Fire TV-powered smart TV

  • A pair of wireless headphones or earbuds

  • A 3.5mm to RCA audio adapter (for wired headphones)

Roku was one of the first streaming device companies to introduce this convenient Bluetooth feature, and now you can use it on Fire TV hardware, too. Here’s how to link a pair of Bluetooth headphones or earbuds to your Fire TV device in just a few simple steps.

Amazon Fire TV Stick 4K (2023) and Fire TV Stick 4K Max (2023).
Phil Nickinson / Digital Trends

How to connect wireless headphones to a Fire TV device

Step 1: First, you’ll want to put your headphones into pairing mode.

Step 2: Grab your Fire Stick remote and go to Settings > Controllers & Bluetooth Devices.

Step 3: Choose Other Bluetooth Devices > Add Bluetooth Devices.

Step 4: Your headphones should appear in the device queue. Navigate over to them with the remote and hit Select. After a few moments, your wireless headphones or earbuds should connect to your Fire TV device.

Step 5: You can also unpair your headphones from your Fire TV device by following all the same steps. Once you select your headphones, you’ll be able to press the Menu button on your remote to complete the unpairing.

Note: Whether you own a Fire TV Stick, , or , the pairing/unpairing process is exactly the same.

The Alexa Voice Remote Enhanced, included with the 2023 Amazon Fire TV Stick 4K Max.
The Alexa Voice Remote Enhanced, included with the 2023 Amazon Fire TV Stick 4K Max. Phil Nickinson / Digital Trends

Connect headphones to a Fire TV device using an Alexa remote

If you happen to own a Fire TV device that came with the or standard Alexa Voice Remote, or you purchased one separately and paired it to your Fire TV device, you can use voice commands to expedite your headphone-pairing process.

Step 1: If you have a Voice Remote Pro, press the Alexa button and say “Pair Bluetooth headphones.” If you have the regular Voice Remote, press the headphone button.

You’ll be taken to the Add Device screen on your Fire TV.

Step 2: Now it’s time to put your headphones in pairing mode. Once your Fire TV detects them, highlight them and hit Select to pair.

Close-up of Thinksound OV21 wired headphones' earcups.
Simon Cohen / Digital Trends

Can I use wired headphones with a Fire TV device?

Amazon doesn’t make a version of the Fire TV remote with a built-in headphone jack. While this eliminates the capability of wiring a headset directly to your Fire TV device, there’s technically a workaround, but you’re going to need some other equipment, specifically, a TV, AV receiver, or soundbar with analog audio outputs.

If your wired headphones use a standard 3.5mm connection, you’ll need to invest in a . Plug the RCA male ends into the left-right audio outputs on your TV, AV receiver, or soundbar, then plug your headphones into the 3.5mm end.

This connectivity method treats your TV, AV receiver, or soundbar as the main audio output device. As long as your Fire TV device is connected to one of the three components, you should be able to hear sound through your wired headset.

Michael Bizzaco
Former AV Contributor
Michael Bizzaco has been selling, installing, and talking about TVs, soundbars, streaming devices, and all things smart home…
Google is not killing your old and aging Chromecast, after all
Users feared Google had silently killed the original Chromecast, but the company says a fix is here.
Chromecast 2015

For a brief moment, the internet genuinely believed Google had finally decided to kill off the original Chromecast, after multiple Gen 1 users reported casting failures and apps refusing to connect over the past few days. Honestly, considering the tiny streaming dongle is now more than a decade old, nobody would have been completely shocked, but thankfully, Google now says the issue has been resolved, and the aging Chromecast survives another day.

Google says your old Chromecast is still safe for now

Read more
Why I kind of hate portable monitors, even though I want one badly
A second screen on the road sounds smart until it starts feeling like rebuilding an office in public
portable monitor, keyboard, mouse

I’ve been traveling more lately, which means I’ve also been doing the worst kind of pre-trip math: the kind where I convince myself I can pack less by bringing more accessories. Before one big trip, I started wondering what I could bring so I wouldn’t have to take my laptop. A tablet? A keyboard? Some tiny hub? Then, somehow, a portable monitor crossed my mind.

That’s a deranged little thought. A portable monitor is basically half a laptop without the half that makes it useful on its own. Still, the category keeps getting more tempting. You can now buy slim USB-C displays, touchscreen models, 4K travel screens, and magnetic setups built for remote work.

Read more
Anker’s Soundcore Liberty 5 earbuds use AI to fix the worst part of wireless earbuds
Liberty 5 Pro series lean hard into practical AI features
Soundcore earbuds

Anker has added two new earbuds to its audio lineup called the Soundcore Liberty 5 Pro and Liberty 5 Pro Max. The regular Liberty 5 already made a strong impression in our review, where we praised Soundcore for getting most of the basics right, even if pricing left it under pressure from cheaper rivals.

Now, Anker is pushing the Liberty 5 line into more AI-focused territory, with the Thus AI chip powering clearer calls, smarter noise cancellation, voice commands, translation, transcripts, and meeting summaries.

Read more