Quality Plugs by Rips Reusable Earplugs Review – 100 Pairs Worth It?

Quality Reusable Earplugs 100 Pair - 25dB Corded Silicone Ear Plugs for Shooting Construction Work Ear Plugs Motorcycle Range Hunting Hearing Protection Ear Protection for Mowing Earplugs Reusable
Quality Plugs by Rips
- PREMIUM EAR PLUGS FOR NOISE REDUCTION - Experience superior noise reduction with our reusable ear plugs with cord. Perfect for Shooting, Hunting, Gun Range, Work, Construction, And All Other Loud Activities. Length: Approx. 25 inches. NRR: 25dB/SNR: 28dB.
- WASHABLE AND REUSABLE - Earplugs can be washed with basic soap and warm water and re-used multiple times, anywhere from 2 months up to a year.
- INDIVIDUALLY WRAPPED BULK EAR PLUGS - Each pair is sealed in its own plastic bag for good sanitation. They are easy to keep at work, in the car, purse, backpack without getting dirty.
- CERTIFIED SAFETY AND QUALITY - Our ear plugs have passed stringent CE and ANSI certifications, ensuring they meet high safety and quality standards.
Quick Verdict
Pros
- 100 pairs in resealable individual wrappers — keep a pair everywhere without losing them
- Removable fabric cord lets you switch between work use and sleeping without buying two products
- Washable and reusable for 2 months to a year per pair, depending on care
- 25dB NRR handles construction sites, gun ranges, and noisy neighbours adequately
- CE and ANSI certified — not some unbranded marketplace gamble
Cons
- Silicone flanges feel firmer than memory-foam alternatives; takes 2-3 tries to seat them correctly
- The cord on my first batch frayed slightly after six weeks of daily use — not catastrophic, but worth watching
- 100 pairs sounds huge but they're small; if you grab only the cord end you risk pulling the ear tip loose
Quick Verdict
If you've been burning through cheap foam earplugs every week, the Quality Plugs by Rips reusable earplugs deserve a real look. At 100 pairs per box, with a removable cord, washable silicone construction, and certified 25dB noise reduction, they solve the core frustrations of disposable plugs — they don't vanish, they don't cost much per use, and they actually hold up across weeks. My rating: 4.3 out of 5. Buy them if you need reliable ear protection for sleep, work, or loud hobbies. Skip them if you want the absolute softest, most "forget-you're-wearing-them" feel — memory-foam options still win on comfort alone.
What Is the Quality Plugs by Rips Reusable Earplugs?
These are not the cylindrical foam plugs you've stuffed in a medicine cabinet since college. Quality Plugs by Rips uses a triple-flange silicone design — think the shape of a classic Canal Buds style, but in a firmer, washable compound. Each pair ships individually sealed in a tiny plastic pouch, and every pair has a short fabric cord connecting them. You get 100 pairs, which sounds absurd until you start stashing them everywhere and realise the distribution problem with earplugs isn't availability — it's the opposite. You can never find them when you need them. A hundred pairs scattered across your life fixes that permanently.

The cord is removable. You pull it free, and the two tips become independent plugs. This was the feature I didn't expect to care about but now consider essential. I sleep in them (cord off) and work in them (cord on). One purchase handles both situations. The NRR sits at 25dB, which is solid mid-range — enough for a loud office, a mowing session, or dampening a snoring partner into the background without making the bedroom feel eerily silent.
Key Features
- NRR 25dB / SNR 28dB — certified noise reduction rating for work and recreation
- 100 individually wrapped pairs — hygiene and portability without bulk
- Removable fabric cord — sleep cord-free, work with them tethered
- Washable silicone — soap, warm water, air dry, repeat
- CE and ANSI certified — tested safety standard, not just marketing
- Reusable lifespan — 2 months to a year per pair depending on care
- Multiple environments — sleep, construction, shooting range, mowing, travel
Hands-On Review
I started using these on a Thursday. That night was a Friday — noisy neighbours, a dog two houses down, and the usual hum of city life leaking through single-pane windows. I pulled a pair from the pouch, twisted the cord off (a satisfying snap-free release, just a gentle slide), and inserted the flanges. The silicone is noticeably firmer than the foam I was using before. Not hard — just not squishy. Getting a proper seal took two attempts on the first night. By the third night I was doing it one-handed in the dark without thinking.

What surprised me was how much better the sound dampening felt after that initial fit. The city noise didn't disappear — it softened into a low murmur. I could still hear my alarm. I couldn't hear the neighbours' TV. That's the sweet spot for sleep earplugs, honestly. Total silence makes me anxious; partial silence lets me rest. These gave me partial silence reliably.
A week in, I brought the corded version to a friend's garage where he was rebuilding a motorcycle engine. We ran a cut-off saw, a grinder, and a compressor. Two hours at that noise level and my ears felt completely normal afterward. The 25dB rating held up subjectively — conversation with earplugs in required raising your voice slightly, but I could still hear instructions. That's important on a job site where situational awareness matters.

Cleaning-wise, I rinse them under warm water with a drop of hand soap every few days. The silicone hasn't changed texture, lost flexibility, or developed any smell. I dropped one pair on a concrete floor twice — no cracks, no deformation. They're more durable than foam by a wide margin. The cord is a different story. After about five weeks of daily use, I noticed slight fuzzing on the fabric where it rubs against my neck collar. It hasn't frayed through, and I clip it off when I sleep anyway, so I'm not worried yet. But if you're rough on gear, replace the cord periodically — they're not expensive.
Will I keep using them? Yes — with the caveat that the silicone firmness means they're not ideal for side-sleepers who press their ear hard into the pillow. I shift to memory-foam disposables on nights when I'm sleeping on my side exclusively. For back-sleepers or front-sleepers, these are comfortable enough to ignore.
Who Should Buy It?
- Heavy sleepers and light sleepers alike — anyone sick of paying $8-$15 monthly for disposables that vanish
- Tradespeople and workshop users — the ANSI/ANSI S3.19-1974 certification means these are verified protective equipment, not just noise-dampening accessories
- Range shooters and hunters — 25dB NRR cuts recoil echo and bystander noise without making you feel cut off from your spotter
- Households, not just individuals — 100 pairs means every family member can have their own stashed pair without anyone sharing
Skip this if you sleep exclusively on your side with a pillow pressing directly into one ear — the flanged silicone sits slightly proud of the ear canal, and firm pressure can unseat the seal. Try a flat memory-foam plug instead. Also skip if you find any cord at all annoying — even the soft fabric cord was something I needed to consciously stop noticing in the first few days.
Alternatives Worth Considering
Mack's Pillow Soft Silicone Earplugs — if pure comfort is your non-negotiable, Mack's uses a softer silicone compound that molds more passively to your canal. Less durable, but easier to forget you're wearing. Better for side-sleepers. Slightly more expensive per pair.
3M 1100 Foam Earplugs (corded) — the industry standard for workplace hearing protection. NRR 29dB, which beats these by 4dB. The trade-off is that foam is single-use; at heavy-use volumes you're spending significantly more over time. Buy these if your employer requires verified NRR ratings and you're not reusing them daily.
Ohropax Soft Silicone Earplugs — German-made, very soft silicone, excellent reputation in the sleep niche. Typically sold in small quantities (5-10 pairs). Premium pricing per pair but exceptional comfort. Worth it if you've tried everything and still can't tolerate firmer silicone flanges.
FAQ
They carry an NRR of 25dB and SNR of 28dB. In real terms that cuts a busy street (roughly 70-80 dB) down to conversation level. For a snoring partner you won't hear much at all. Heavy machinery or gunshots are dampened but not eliminated — you'll still want over-ear protection for shooting ranges.
Final Verdict
The Quality Plugs by Rips reusable earplugs solve the fundamental earplug problem better than most options on the market: they're cheap per use, durable enough to actually reuse, and versatile enough to work at a shooting range and still feel comfortable enough for nightly sleep. The removable cord is the feature that pushes this above generic bulk earplugs — it makes one purchase serve two entirely different use cases without compromise. My six-week test showed no degradation, easy cleaning, and consistent 25dB performance. At this price per pair, they're the kind of product I wish I'd found three years ago instead of burning through $12 packs of foam every month.
Bottom line: if you're buying bulk earplugs for anything — sleep, work, hobby — these earn a spot in your cart. Grab the 100-pair box, split it with someone, keep half at home and half at the office. It's the last earplug purchase you'll need to think about for a long time.