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

JBL wants you to ditch your soundbar for its affordable new home theater lineup

Add as a preferred source on Google
JBL MA/Stage 2 Series home theater products.
Derek Malcolm / Digital Trends

At a swanky rooftop launch event at the top of Hollywood’s historic Roosevelt Hotel last night, JBL pulled the veil off a shiny new lineup of affordable AV receivers and speakers that it hopes are easy enough to use and full of accessible features that even the component-phobic “next generation” of users will appreciate.

JBL’s new MA (Modern Audio) series of AV receivers and Stage 2 series loudspeakers abandon the the mix-and-match mentality of building a home theater system and are designed and engineered to work together, JBL says, right down to their matching “Espresso” and “Latte” finishes.

Recommended Videos

“They offer consumers a unified and cohesive system that combines simplicity, design, quality, and scalability — all at an affordable price,” JBL says. And the company is hoping that this simplicity will coax younger home theater enthusiasts into exploring beyond what their soundbars are capable of.

JBL MA Series AV receivers.
Derek Malcolm / Digital Trends

The MA lineup is dizzying, and features five new AV receivers that range in price from $400 to $1,600. They all have increasingly modern features and connectivity as you move up the range, including support for 4K and/or 8K, HDMI 2.1, Dolby Audio and DTS (in the lower models), Dolby Atmos and DTS:X, and passthrough support for HDR10, HDR10+, and Dolby Vision. They also range in power from 60 to 140 watts-per-channel.

JBL Stage 2 Series subwoofers.
Derek Malcolm / Digital Trends

At the top end of the range sits the “HP” (High Performance) models, the 7.2-channel Buy at JBL ($1,200) and the flagship 9.2-channel Buy at JBL ($1,600) that both feature large, bright color LED screens and can be outfitted with Dirac’s Live calibration software if the user wants to graduate to really dialling in the sound of their home theater.

Among the features that JBL hopes will lure would-be soundbar buyers are a companion EZ Set EQ mobile app that makes system calibration a much easier process and “Works with SmartThings” integration for automated routines that control their other Internet of Things devices. Other features include Apple AirPlay, Google Cast, Bluetooth, and Spotify Connect.

Here’s a rundown of the full MA range of products. They’re all available starting July 18 from jbl.com.

MA Series AV receivers

JBL MA Series AV receiver.
JBL
  • Buy at JBL : 60 watts, 5.2-channel 4K, HDMI 2.0 (4K/60Hz): $400
  • Buy at JBL : 75 watts,  5.2-channel 8K, HDMI 2.1 (4K/120Hz): $600
  • Buy at JBL : 110 watts, 7.2-channel, 8K, HDMI 2.1 (4K/120Hz): $800
  • Buy at JBL : 125 watts, 7.2-channel, 8K, HDMI 2.1 (4K/120Hz), Dirac Live ready: $1,200
  • Buy at JBL : 140 watts, up to 9.1 channels, 8K, HDMI 2.1 (4K/120Hz), Dirac Live ready: $1,600

Stage 2 Series home theater speakers

JBL MA Series AV receiver and JBL Stage 2 Series Speakers.
JBL
Derek Malcolm
Former Contributing Editor, A/V
Derek Malcolm is a contributing editor and evergreen lead for the A/V and Home Theater section of Digital Trends. Derek…
Sony’s True RGB technology is aiming for the best of OLED and Mini LED
Sony’s new display technology is designed to combine OLED level color with Mini LED brightness
Sony Bravia 9 II (

The battle for premium TV buyers has largely revolved around two technologies in recent years: OLED and Mini LED. OLED has earned a reputation for delivering exceptional contrast and viewing angles, while Mini LED has pushed brightness levels to new heights. The tradeoff has often been deciding which compromise makes more sense for your room and viewing habits.

Sony believes that conversation may be about to change. During a private media briefing in New York City, the company unveiled a new display technology called True RGB, which rethinks how a TV backlight works and aims to combine some of the biggest strengths of both OLED and Mini LED.

Read more
Alienware’s upgraded gaming monitors offer higher brightness and refresh rate starting at $300
Alienware’s four new 30-inch-plus screens bring higher brightness, faster refresh rates, and cheaper 240Hz options.
Computer Hardware, Electronics, Hardware

Alienware has four new screens coming out of Computex 2026, and the lineup cuts across almost every tier that serious PC gamers care about. Its latest Alienware gaming monitors put brighter OLED, faster ultrawide refresh rates, and $299.99 240Hz QHD gaming into one launch window.

The range includes a 39-inch 5K OLED flagship, a 34-inch 280Hz QD-OLED ultrawide, and two 240Hz QHD LCD options at 32 inches and 34 inches. That spread gives Alienware a high-end halo product while pushing fast QHD screens closer to mainstream upgrade territory.

Read more
New Apple TV and HomePod mini are apparently ready for a fall launch
Apple finally remembered the HomePod mini exists
HomePod

Apple’s smart home hardware lineup may finally be getting refreshed after years of relative silence. According to a new report from Mark Gurman, Apple is preparing updated versions of both the Apple TV set-top box and the HomePod mini, with launches currently planned for later this fall.

The timing is notable because Apple’s home-focused products have largely remained unchanged while rivals like Amazon and Google aggressively expanded their smart home ecosystems with AI-powered assistants and connected devices. Apple now appears ready to reposition its home products around the company’s next-generation Siri and Apple Intelligence strategy.

Read more