
For CES 2026, hearing technology is drawing increased attention, shaped by a mix of demographic change, policy shifts, and steady advances in miniaturized electronics. While it does not command the same spotlight as smartphones or AI-focused PCs, hearing aids are becoming more visible within the broader consumer tech conversation.
Around 2.5 billion people worldwide are projected to suffer from some form of hearing loss by 2050, the World Health Organization says, with more than 700 million of those being in need of rehabilitation services, or around one in four people on Earth. Age is a major factor. According to World Health Organization statistics, more than one-third of those over 65 years of age already live with measurable hearing loss.
Despite growing demand, hearing aids adoption remains low. Prices and lack of insurance on such devices remain major obstacles in the U.S. market, with many devices costing thousands of dollars and most private plans providing little or no support at all. Add to that stigma, lack of awareness and belated treatment, and many people simply don’t have access to hearing aids.
Policy changes are changing the market
A major shift came in October 2022, when the U.S.FDA finalized a rule establishing a new category of over-the-counter (OTC) hearing aids. The change makes it possible for adults with perceived mild to moderate hearing loss to buy hearing aids at retail or online sales directly without a prescription.
Industry groups such as the Hearing Industries Association have seen a significant improvement in penetration after the policy change. Its implementation is still uneven, but the shift has lowered barriers to entry, and left manufacturers to reconsider pricing, design and distribution.
CES 2026 marks the next phase of that transition, a period when more focus is placed on usefulness and consumer acceptance — not regulatory accessibility — for companies.
Hearing aids as consumer tech
One of the clearest trends on the show floor is the continued convergence between hearing aids and consumer audio products. Hearing devices are becoming more and more seen as everyday electronics than as medical devices. Bluetooth connectivity, app-based controls and wellness-oriented sound features are increasingly a part of daily life, reflecting an expectation for how hearing technology should fit in.
Design has become central to this transition. Smaller and less visible form factors are considered a big deal to encourage first-time adopters by most people, especially users who see traditional hearing aids as a symptom of age and disability.
ELEHEAR, a hearing technology company working in the OTC category, provides one example of this shift. At CES 2026, the company introduced its latest OTC hearing aids, ELEHEAR Delight, a completely-in-canal (CIC) model intended to reduce visibility while maintaining core functionality.
AI moves from differentiator to baseline
The U.S. hearing aids market is also undergoing a more integrated transformation on a broader scale as a result of artificial intelligence and machine learning. With the growth of AI adoption in industrial applications, hearing devices can make real-time decisions against the audio environment, its user preferences and context to enhance clarity and customization.
At CES, AI is being regarded more and more as just a baseline capability over a standout feature. This transformation requires a shift away from raw amplification to contextual sound processing that is capable of adapting to real-world settings like eateries, public transportation systems and group conversations.
“Hearing technology is moving beyond simple amplification,” said David Hogan, Managing Director of ELEHEAR. “By adapting AI in OTC hearing aids, we are making advanced hearing technology more accessible and affordable.”
CES 2026 does not indicate a single moment of breakthrough for hearing. Rather, it reveals a category in continued transition. Support from policy makers, demographic characteristics, as well as piecemeal changes in AI and hardware are gradually transforming how hearing aids are perceived for sale, design and use.
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