What actually matters
- 1A separate subwoofer makes the biggest difference. If you watch films or like bass, a bar with a wireless sub will sound dramatically fuller than a slim all-in-one. If you mainly want clearer dialogue in a flat or small room, a single bar is fine — and neater.
- 2Dolby Atmos is worth it only with up-firing speakers. Many bars list "Atmos" but just decode it through forward speakers. Genuine height effects need up-firing drivers (and a bit of ceiling). Don't pay the Atmos premium for a badge alone.
- 3Check the connection. You want HDMI eARC to pass full-quality sound from the TV with one cable and a single remote. Optical works but caps quality and can't pass lossless Atmos.
- 4Match the bar to the room, not the spec sheet. A huge 11.1.4 system in a small lounge is wasted money and a setup headache. Bedrooms and flats are better served by a compact bar; big open-plan rooms reward separate rears and a sub.
Typical UK price bands (2026)
| Budget | What you get |
|---|---|
| £80–£200 | A clear upgrade on TV speakers; better dialogue; often a small or no sub. Great value for bedrooms and casual viewing. |
| £250–£500 | The sweet spot: convincing Atmos, a real wireless sub, room-filling sound for most living rooms. |
| £800+ | Flagship multi-speaker systems with detachable rears and big subs — cinematic, but only worth it in a dedicated/large space. |
Common mistakes to avoid
- ✕Buying on "channels" (5.1, 7.1.4) alone — placement and the sub matter more than the number.
- ✕Paying for Atmos with no up-firing drivers or no ceiling to bounce off.
- ✕Assuming the in-store shelf price is the best — soundbars swing a lot between Currys, Argos, John Lewis, AO, Amazon and Richer Sounds.
See today's top soundbars — with live UK prices
Savvey Search reads the latest expert reviews and shows three current, in-stock picks for your budget and room, each with a live verified UK price. As of mid-2026, reviewer round-ups are led by bars like the Sonos Arc Ultra, Samsung's flagship HW-Q990F and the JBL Bar 1000 — but models move fast, so check what's current and what it costs right now.
Get my soundbar picks →Is it actually a good price?
This is the bit a spec list won't tell you. The same soundbar can vary by £50–£150 across UK retailers, and "sale" prices are often just the normal price with an inflated RRP next to it. Savvey checks 40+ UK retailers for the exact model, shows you the cheapest verified price and the market median, so you can see at a glance whether the deal in front of you is genuine or just the going rate.
FAQ
Do I need Dolby Atmos?
Only if the bar has up-firing speakers and your room has a reasonably flat ceiling. Otherwise a good stereo or 3.1 bar with a sub will sound better for the money than a cheap "Atmos" bar.
Soundbar or proper speakers?
For most people a soundbar wins on simplicity, price and looks. Separate speakers can sound better but cost more, need space and an amp, and are far more faff.
Will a soundbar work with my TV?
Almost certainly. Look for HDMI eARC on both the TV and bar for the best, simplest connection; otherwise optical works on virtually every TV.