Can You Connect AirPods To Apple TV? | Pairing Without The Hassle

Yes—AirPods can pair with Apple TV in seconds, letting you watch privately and control audio right from the Apple TV interface.

Late-night movies, shared walls, sleeping kids, noisy roommates—this is where AirPods and Apple TV become a perfect combo. Once you route Apple TV audio to AirPods, the room goes quiet while your show stays loud and clear.

The good news: Apple TV can send sound to AirPods two ways. If your AirPods are tied to the same Apple Account as the Apple TV, you can often connect with a couple of clicks. If not, you can pair them like standard Bluetooth headphones.

What You Need Before You Start

Get these basics lined up first. It saves you from the classic “why don’t they show up?” moment.

  • Charged AirPods: Put them in the case for a minute if battery is low.
  • Apple TV with Bluetooth: Apple TV HD and Apple TV 4K models handle Bluetooth headphones.
  • Updated tvOS: Newer versions tend to behave better with automatic device switching.
  • Same Apple Account (optional): If Apple TV and AirPods share the same Apple Account, pairing can feel almost automatic.

Connecting AirPods To Apple TV For The Smoothest Setup

If your AirPods are already linked to an iPhone or iPad that uses the same Apple Account as your Apple TV, start here. This route usually takes less effort than manual Bluetooth pairing.

Option A: Connect From Control Center While Something Is Playing

Start a video in any app. Then do this:

  1. Press and hold the TV button on the Siri Remote to open Control Center.
  2. Select the audio output control (you’ll see an icon for audio devices).
  3. Choose your AirPods from the list.

Once selected, Apple TV routes audio to your AirPods and the TV speakers go silent. That’s normal—Apple TV uses one audio path at a time for this setup.

If you want Apple’s official step list for this exact flow, Apple documents it here: Use AirPods or Beats with Apple TV 4K.

Option B: Bring AirPods Close To Apple TV, Then Select Them

This can work when your AirPods are already tied to your Apple Account and nearby. Put the AirPods in your ears, keep the case close to the Apple TV, then open Control Center and select them as the output device. If the AirPods show up, tap them and you’re done.

Manual Pairing Through Bluetooth Settings

If your AirPods don’t appear in Control Center, pair them like any Bluetooth accessory. This is also the path that works well for AirPods used on a different Apple Account.

Put AirPods In Pairing Mode

Keep the lid open, with both AirPods inside the case:

  • AirPods (most models): Press and hold the setup button on the back of the case until the light flashes.
  • AirPods Max: Press and hold the noise control button until the light flashes.

The goal is simple: you want the case light to flash so Apple TV can detect them as a nearby Bluetooth device.

Pair On Apple TV

  1. Open Settings on Apple TV.
  2. Select Remotes and Devices (wording can vary slightly by tvOS version).
  3. Select Bluetooth.
  4. Wait for your AirPods to appear under available devices, then select them to pair.

Apple’s official Bluetooth pairing steps for Apple TV are listed here: Pair Bluetooth accessories with Apple TV.

What Happens After They’re Connected

Once pairing is done, Apple TV treats your AirPods like a saved audio device. That means you can reconnect fast, switch back to speakers, and adjust a few settings without digging through menus every time.

Reconnecting Without Re-Pairing

Most of the time you won’t need to pair again. To reconnect:

  1. Press and hold the TV button to open Control Center.
  2. Open audio output selection.
  3. Select your AirPods.

If you see your AirPods listed but they won’t connect, drop to the troubleshooting section below. It’s usually a range, battery, or device-switching issue.

Switching Back To TV Speakers

To return audio to your TV or soundbar, open Control Center and pick the TV speakers (or your HDMI audio device). Apple TV will route the audio back instantly.

Table: Common Connection Paths And What Each One Needs

This table helps you choose the cleanest route based on what you have in front of you.

Connection Path What You Need When It Fits Best
Control Center pick list AirPods charged and nearby You want the fastest manual switch
Same Apple Account auto-appear Apple TV signed into same Apple Account as AirPods You use AirPods across Apple devices daily
Bluetooth pairing AirPods in pairing mode + Bluetooth menu AirPods don’t show in Control Center
Re-connect from saved device list AirPods already paired once You paired earlier and just want audio again
Two-headphone listening Apple TV 4K + compatible wireless headphones Two people want private audio at once
AirPods Max wired listening AirPods Max cable setup (device-dependent) Not typical for Apple TV, more for other gear
Reset and re-pair Forget device + re-enter pairing mode Persistent connection errors
Distance and interference cleanup AirPods near Apple TV, fewer wireless conflicts Audio cuts out or stutters

Listening Features People Miss On Apple TV

Once your AirPods are connected, Apple TV can offer more than “sound in your ears.” Some features depend on your AirPods model and tvOS version, but here are the ones worth checking.

Spatial Audio And Head Tracking

With compatible AirPods models, Apple TV can provide Spatial Audio for supported content. When it’s available, you’ll see options in the audio controls area. If you notice voices sounding wider or anchored to the screen, that’s the feature doing its thing.

Two Sets Of Headphones On Apple TV 4K

Apple TV 4K can send audio to two sets of compatible wireless headphones at the same time. That’s handy when you want quiet viewing without sharing one pair of earbuds.

Separate Volume Control

Volume behavior depends on your setup. With AirPods connected, use the remote volume buttons or Control Center to change the listening level. If volume keys don’t respond, check whether your remote is set up for TV volume control or Apple TV volume control in Settings.

Fixes When AirPods Won’t Connect To Apple TV

When the connection fails, it’s usually one of a few common culprits. Work through these in order so you don’t waste time.

1) Charge Both AirPods And The Case

Low battery can cause weird behavior: AirPods appear in the list, then fail to connect, or connect and drop a minute later. Put them in the case and charge for a bit, then try again.

2) Move AirPods Closer And Reduce Interference

Apple TV boxes often sit near HDMI cables, routers, soundbars, and game consoles. That’s a busy wireless zone. Move closer, keep the case near the Apple TV, and try pairing again.

3) Disconnect AirPods From Another Device

AirPods love to jump to the last active device. If someone in the house is using them on an iPhone, iPad, or Mac, Apple TV may lose the tug-of-war. Pause audio on the other device, then select AirPods again on Apple TV.

4) Forget The Device And Re-Pair

If Apple TV thinks the AirPods are paired but the connection keeps failing, wipe the pairing record and start fresh:

  1. Open Settings on Apple TV.
  2. Go to the Bluetooth device list.
  3. Select your AirPods, then choose the option to forget/remove the device.
  4. Put AirPods back in pairing mode and pair again.

5) Restart Apple TV

A restart clears stuck Bluetooth states. You can restart from Settings or by unplugging Apple TV for a short moment, then plugging it back in.

6) Update tvOS If Pairing Feels Buggy

If your Apple TV is running older tvOS, Bluetooth pairing can be less stable. Updating tvOS is often the difference between constant re-pairing and a clean “select once, it sticks” experience.

Table: Fast Troubleshooting Checklist

If you want a short path to a working connection, run this list top to bottom.

Symptom Try This First Next Move If It Still Fails
AirPods don’t show up Put AirPods in pairing mode with lid open Restart Apple TV, then scan again
AirPods show up but won’t connect Charge AirPods and case Forget device on Apple TV, then re-pair
Audio cuts out Move closer, reduce wireless clutter Disconnect other Bluetooth devices
AirPods connect to phone instead Pause audio on the phone Temporarily disable Bluetooth on the phone
Volume buttons don’t work Change volume from Control Center Check remote volume settings in Apple TV
Delay in games Try TV speakers or wired audio for gaming Use AirPods for shows, not twitch games
One AirPod silent Re-seat AirPods in case, then reconnect Re-pair after forgetting the device
Connection keeps dropping nightly Restart Apple TV before pairing Update tvOS and re-pair after update

Limits To Expect With AirPods On Apple TV

AirPods work well with Apple TV, but there are a few practical limits worth knowing so you don’t chase a setting that doesn’t exist.

TV Speakers And AirPods Together

When Apple TV routes audio to AirPods, the TV speakers usually stop outputting sound. If your goal is “AirPods plus speakers at the same time,” Apple TV doesn’t commonly run that as a standard setup. If you need shared room audio and private audio at once, two-headphone listening is the more realistic option when your hardware supports it.

Bluetooth Audio Delay For Fast Gaming

For movies and shows, Bluetooth delay often goes unnoticed. For rhythm games or competitive action, you may feel a slight lag. If timing matters, switch to TV speakers or a wired setup for that session, then hop back to AirPods for streaming.

Older Apple TV Models

If you’re using an older Apple TV unit without a modern Bluetooth audio path, AirPods pairing may not be available in the way newer models handle it. In that case, the workaround usually involves a separate Bluetooth transmitter attached to your TV’s audio output—effective, but it’s outside Apple TV’s built-in menus.

Make It Stick: A Simple Routine For Daily Use

If you use AirPods with Apple TV often, this tiny routine keeps it smooth:

  1. Put AirPods in your ears before you start playback.
  2. Start the show, then open Control Center and pick AirPods as output.
  3. When you’re done, switch audio output back to TV speakers so the next person isn’t confused.

That’s it. After a couple of nights, it becomes muscle memory.

References & Sources