For portable Bluetooth speakers, choose JBL Clip 5 if you want pocket carry; pick JBL Flip 6 if you prefer bigger sound and louder bass.
JBL Clip 5
JBL Flip 6
Travel & Clip‑On
- Carry under 0.7 lb
- Attach to bags; hike ready
- Auracast link to new JBL
JBL Clip 5
Daily Desk To Deck
- Podcasts at work
- Music in kitchens
- EQ in JBL Portable app
Clip 5 or Flip 6
Backyard & Small Parties
- 30 W two‑way driver
- More bass than mini clip‑ons
- PartyBoost chaining
JBL Flip 6
Compact Bluetooth speakers live in two lanes: tiny clip‑ons for backpacks and small cylinders that can fill a room. These two JBL models hit those lanes cleanly. Read on for the fast verdict, the trade‑offs that matter, and a clear pick based on where and how you listen.
In A Nutshell
Pick Clip 5 if you prize size and carry ease. The integrated carabiner, sub‑one‑pound weight, and Auracast sharing make it a smart travel buddy. Choose Flip 6 if you want louder sound with more bass and a real sense of scale. Its 30‑watt two‑way driver wins for patios, kitchens, and dorm rooms.
Side‑By‑Side Specs
The clip‑on wins on size and carry. The cylinder wins on volume and bass headroom.
JBL Clip 5 — What We Like / What We Don’t Like
✅ What We Like
- Under 0.7 lb with a wide, integrated carabiner—easy to clip to bags or a belt.
- IP67 rating and a sealed USB‑C port keep it ready for beach days and hikes.
- Auracast sharing plus stereo pairing with a second unit adds party flexibility.
- Bluetooth 5.3 and the JBL Portable app EQ for quick tuning.
⚠️ What We Don’t Like
- Mono driver with 7 W output can’t match a larger cylinder for bass or reach.
- Doesn’t link with PartyBoost speakers; it uses Auracast instead.
- No microphone; this is a pure music device.
JBL Flip 6 — What We Like / What We Don’t Like
✅ What We Like
- Two‑way design (woofer + tweeter) with 30 W RMS brings fuller, louder sound.
- IP67 and a rugged cylinder that stands or lays flat; stable on tables and decks.
- PartyBoost links multiple JBL units; easy way to line speakers across a room.
- JBL Portable app EQ lets you tilt toward more bass or cleaner vocals.
⚠️ What We Don’t Like
- Heavier at 1.21 lb and no carabiner; not great for clipping to a pack.
- Stays on PartyBoost; it can’t join Auracast chains like Clip 5.
- Higher price than a clip‑on speaker.
ℹ️ Good To Know: Clip 5’s setup, care notes, and charging cautions appear in JBL’s Clip 5 quick start guide. Flip 6’s power, driver layout, and PartyBoost details are in the official Flip 6 spec sheet.
Clip 5 Or Flip 6: Which Fits You Better
Performance & Speed
Think scale first. Clip 5 is a tiny sound bubble for a desk, a hotel room, or a hiking stop. Its 7‑watt mono driver favors clarity at close range and works best within a few feet. Flip 6 steps into “room fill.” The 45×80‑mm woofer and 16‑mm tweeter deliver stronger bass lines, clearer highs, and better reach at the same volume setting. If you expect your speaker to carry across a kitchen or onto a patio, Flip 6 earns its keep. If you want a soundtrack clipped to a backpack strap while you move, Clip 5 feels made for that.
Display & Build
There’s no screen on either, but the hardware tells the story. Clip 5’s wide, integrated carabiner is the star. It hooks to a bag or belt loop in a second, and the 0.63‑lb body won’t drag. Flip 6 is a 7‑inch cylinder with a grippy fabric jacket and passive radiator end caps. It sits steady upright or sideways, which helps on small shelves. Both carry an IP67 rating, so dust and a dunk aren’t scary as long as the port is dry before charging.
Battery & Charging
Each model claims up to 12 hours per charge in typical use. Clip 5 adds a Playtime Boost mode that can stretch near 15 hours by trimming dynamics. Flip 6 charges a bit faster (~2.5 h) than Clip 5 (~3 h). If you’re out for a full day, both are fine; Clip 5’s Boost is handy when you want to extend runtime at moderate volume.
Ports & Connectivity
Both charge via USB‑C and stream over Bluetooth. Clip 5 runs Bluetooth 5.3 and uses Auracast for multi‑speaker sharing; that lets a phone or an Auracast transmitter broadcast to many compatible speakers at once. You can also pair two Clip 5 units for stereo. Flip 6 runs Bluetooth 5.1 and uses PartyBoost to link with many JBL cylinders for big gatherings. The catch: the two link systems don’t mix. If you already own PartyBoost models, Flip 6 meshes with them. If you want the newer Auracast broadcast style, Clip 5 is the one in this pair that offers it.
Software & Updates
The JBL Portable app is the control center for both. You can update firmware and use a simple EQ to nudge bass or reduce shouty mids. It’s quick to learn and doesn’t get in the way. No voice assistants or smart‑home hooks here—these speakers keep things simple.
Pricing & Packages
MSRP lands at $79.95 for Clip 5 and $129.95 for Flip 6 in the U.S. You’ll find a USB‑C cable in the box plus the paper guides. Colors rotate often; retailers list seasonal shades. Sale prices pop up during big retail events—great news if you’re flexible on color. If you already own PartyBoost gear, plug Flip 6 into that setup. If you want the newest broadcast‑style linking and a tiny footprint, Clip 5 carries that flag.
Price, Value & Ownership
Clip 5 lowers the buy‑in and saves space. Flip 6 costs more, but the two‑way driver pays off when you want a fuller mix in a medium room.
Where Each One Wins
🏆 Room Fill — JBL Flip 6
🏆 Price — JBL Clip 5
🏆 Stereo Detail — JBL Flip 6
🏆 Clip‑On Uses — JBL Clip 5
Decision Guide
✅ Choose JBL Clip 5 If…
- You want the smallest speaker that still gets loud for one or two listeners.
- You’ll hang it from a backpack, stroller, or shower hook daily.
- You like the idea of Auracast sharing or pairing two small units for stereo.
✅ Choose JBL Flip 6 If…
- You want stronger bass and clearer highs for kitchens, dorms, or patios.
- You already have PartyBoost speakers and want to chain them together.
- You prefer a cylinder that stands up on a table and plays across a room.
Best Fit For Most Shoppers
If you’re deciding with no collection to match, Flip 6 is the safer “one‑and‑done” buy for a home or dorm. The extra driver and higher output create a fuller mix and better reach without taking much shelf space. If you’re weight‑sensitive or you want a speaker that lives on a bag, Clip 5 is the right call. Those who value a modern broadcast‑style link will also prefer Clip 5, since it uses Auracast while Flip 6 stays on PartyBoost.
Specs and prices cross‑checked against JBL’s official documents and U.S. retailer listings: Clip 5 quick start guide for battery care and features; Flip 6 spec sheet for drivers, power, Bluetooth version, and runtime; Best Buy U.S. listings for MSRP and weights.
- Clip 5 MSRP and weight shown on Best Buy’s product page. See “JBL Clip 5 Portable Bluetooth Speaker — Black” ($79.95) for current store pricing.
- Flip 6 MSRP appears on multiple U.S. sellers; Best Buy color listings often show $129.95 as the regular price.
