Poly (Plantronics) headsets
Poly (Plantronics) headsets — every series, wired and wireless
You're looking at our full Poly headset range — the brand you may still know as Plantronics, now part of HP. Office, call center, remote, hybrid: if it carries the Poly or Plantronics name, it's here.
The fastest way to narrow it down is by connection — wireless Bluetooth, wireless DECT, wired USB, or corded for a deskphone. Pick that first and everything else follows. The guide below sorts the whole range that way.
How to choose a Poly headset
Poly makes a headset for nearly every desk, which is great until you're staring at forty of them. Connection type is the cut that does most of the work — it decides what plugs into what, and it maps to how you actually spend your day.
- [icon:bluetooth] Wireless Bluetooth — the Voyager line. Roam from your desk to a meeting room and pair to your laptop and phone at the same time. The pick for remote and hybrid workers who don't sit still. Browse Poly wireless Bluetooth headsets →
- [icon:stand] Wireless DECT — the Savi line. Longer range than Bluetooth and no congestion when a whole floor is wearing one — it runs on its own frequency with a charging base. Built for deskbound office and call-center use. Browse Poly Savi DECT headsets →
- [icon:usb-a] Wired USB — the Blackwire line. Plug into the computer and you're working — no battery to die mid-call, no pairing. The sensible choice for always-at-the-desk roles and large, budget-conscious rollouts. Browse Poly USB headsets →
- [icon:headset-mono] Corded for a deskphone — the EncorePro / H-Series line. Quick Disconnect headsets for traditional phone systems and high-volume contact centers, where a durable connector beats a battery. Browse Plantronics H-Series corded headsets →
The Poly range — Voyager, Blackwire, Savi, EncorePro and more
The model names look cryptic until you know the families. Each one owns a specific job:
- Voyager — wireless Bluetooth. The mobile and hybrid range, from over-ear models to earbuds. Select models add active noise cancellation (ANC) to quiet the room around your ears.
- Blackwire — wired USB. The corded computer headset for people who want one cable and zero charging.
- Savi — wireless DECT. Office and call-center cordless with long range and a desk base.
- EncorePro — corded Quick Disconnect, the call-center workhorse formerly sold as the "H-Series." These use a noise-canceling microphone to reject room noise on the caller's end — not ANC on your ears, which is a common mix-up. See the full corded range →
- Sync — speakerphones for huddle rooms and the kitchen-table home office. Browse Poly speakerphones →
- Studio — video bars and conference cameras, the Polycom heritage side of the catalog. Browse Poly video conferencing →
Eight years later, a Plantronics headset carried Neil Armstrong's "one small step" back from the moon. The brand has been engineering voice-first audio longer than almost anyone still selling headsets — and it shows up where it counts, in the microphone. That's the through-line across every series above, whatever the box says on the front.
Is Plantronics the same as Poly?
Yes — one company, three names over time. Plantronics acquired Polycom in 2018, rebranded the combined business as Poly in 2019, and HP acquired Poly in 2022. It now trades as HP Poly. Through every name change the headsets stayed the same products with the same model numbers, so a Plantronics Blackwire and a Poly Blackwire are the identical headset.
[callout type="info"]You'll see both names across boxes and listings, and it isn't a counterfeit problem. Older stock wears the Plantronics "PLT" logo; newer stock says Poly or HP — same headset, same hardware inside, sometimes a fresh part number on the label. If your current fleet says Plantronics and a new unit says Poly, they still match and still pair.[/callout]Is Plantronics the same brand as Poly?
Yes. Plantronics rebranded as Poly in 2019 after merging with Polycom, and HP acquired Poly in 2022. Every headset carried through unchanged, so a Plantronics Voyager and a Poly Voyager are the same product — only the logo and sometimes the part number on the box differ.
Should I choose a wireless or wired Poly headset?
Wireless (Voyager Bluetooth or Savi DECT) suits anyone who moves around or works across a laptop and phone. Wired (Blackwire USB or EncorePro corded) suits a fixed desk, large rollouts, and anyone who never wants to think about a battery. Start with that decision and the model choices narrow fast.
Are Poly headsets certified for Microsoft Teams?
Most series offer Teams-certified variants, and nearly all models work with the major UC platforms like Teams, Zoom, and Google Meet. Certification means the dedicated Teams button and call controls are tested to work, not just that audio passes through — so check the certification on the specific model you're buying.
What's the difference between Voyager, Blackwire, and Savi?
Voyager is wireless Bluetooth for mobile and hybrid work. Blackwire is wired USB for a fixed desk with no battery to manage. Savi is wireless DECT for office and call-center use, with longer range and a charging base. Same Poly audio engineering across all three — the difference is purely how they connect.
Do Poly headsets work with desk phones?
Yes. The EncorePro corded line connects to deskphones through a Quick Disconnect cable or amplifier, and several Savi DECT models connect to a
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