As hybrid work settles in for the long haul, Jabra is doubling down on professional-grade collaboration tools with the launch of its most advanced headset series yet, the Jabra Evolve3, alongside a new modular video conferencing solution, the Jabra PanaCast Room Kit. Unveiled for the Singapore market, the two products reflect Jabra’s integrated approach to hybrid work – covering both personal audio and meeting room video in a single ecosystem.
Jabra is betting big on voice as the next interface for work. Citing its Knowledge Worker Study conducted with the London School of Economics, the company says 60 per cent of professionals expect voice to become the primary way they interact with workplace technology within the next three years. According to Jabra’s own research, 99 per cent of knowledge workers say bad audio affects online meetings, while call quality remains the number one pain point when using headsets. Yet nearly half still rely on consumer-grade headphones for work.

Enter the Jabra Evolve3 series, available in two variants of over-ear model Evolve3 85 and on-ear model Evolve3 75. Instead of the traditional protruding microphone arm, the Evolve3 series uses Jabra ClearVoice technology powered by deep neural network (DNN) models trained on over 60 million real-world sentences. The system isolates the user’s voice from surrounding noise without requiring a visible boom mic – a cleaner look for professionals who move between calls, commutes and office spaces.
Adaptive Active Noise Cancellation (ANC) adjusts in real time based on the environment and headset fit, while Spatial Sound aims to make calls feel more natural and less fatiguing. The headsets support secure Bluetooth Low Energy connections, Google Fast Pair and centralised configuration and firmware updates via the Jabra Plus mobile app.

The Evolve3 series offers up to 37 hours of use, with a 10-minute fast charge delivering up to 10 hours of listening time. The over-ear Evolve3 85 stretches to 25 hours of call time or 120 hours of media playback (with ANC and busylight off), while the lighter Evolve3 75 offers 22 hours of call time or 110 hours of media playback under similar conditions.
Major differences between the two models are that the Evolve3 85 is designed for maximum immersion and noise isolation, making it more suitable for louder office environments or focused work. It folds for portability and comes with a compact storage case. On the other hand, the Evolve3 75 is lighter and more breathable, catering to hybrid professionals who want greater situational awareness while working.

The Evolve3 85 (get it at Shopee and Lazada) is priced at S$890 (USB-C/USB-A) or S$990 with a wireless charging stand. The Evolve3 75 (get it at Shopee and Lazada) starts at S$688, or S$786 with a charging stand.
Beyond personal headsets, Jabra is also extending its hybrid work playbook into shared spaces with the PanaCast Room Kit, expected to be available locally in Q2 2026. Designed for mid to large meeting rooms, the kit supports configurations with one, three or five cameras. Built around Jabra’s panoramic video technology and multi-camera intelligence, the system dynamically frames speakers and captures the entire room for what the company calls a “front-row” meeting experience.

At the heart of the kit is the Jabra PanaCast 55 VBS, a video bar delivering 180-degree panoramic video with intelligent framing and edge AI features. The system can be paired with the Jabra PanaCast SpeakerMic, an extension microphone that captures voices evenly across the room and provides intuitive controls.

An AI-driven multi-camera system powered by Huddly Crew – now part of the Jabra portfolio – enables intelligent speaker tracking. Director modes automatically shift focus to whoever is speaking, adapting as conversations unfold. The modular design allows organisations to standardise collaboration tools across offices while scaling camera coverage based on room size and layout.