

Denon is refreshing its wireless speaker lineup with three new models: the Denon Home 200, Home 400, and Home 600. All three go on sale March 24, 2026, and the idea is pretty simple. Whether you want a compact speaker for a bedroom, something stronger for a living room, or a larger all-in-one option with more bass, Denon now has a clearer three-step lineup to match.
What Denon seems to be going for here is a balance between sound, convenience, and design. These speakers are meant to be part of your home, not just pieces of tech you tuck into a corner and forget about. That is why the company is talking just as much about finishes and materials as it is about drivers and amps.

Across the lineup, Denon is using a consistent design approach with details like:
That may sound like standard lifestyle-audio talk, but it matters. Speakers like these usually live out in the open, on a shelf, console, or countertop, so how they look plays a big role in whether they actually fit into your space.
“The latest generation of Denon Home brings effortless whole‑home sound together with the superior audio performance people expect from us,” said Lyle Smith, President of Sound United at HARMAN. “Each speaker is designed to complement any space while giving listeners seamless, multi‑room, wireless control powered by our HEOS platform. Whether someone is hosting, relaxing or moving from room to room, these new speakers reveal all the detail in their favorite music with a level of convenience that fits naturally into daily life.”

The lineup itself is easy to understand.
The Home 200 uses a three-driver, three-amplifier design. Denon says it is built to deliver room-filling sound from a compact cabinet, which makes it the obvious fit for smaller rooms, bedrooms, home offices, or anywhere you want decent sound without giving up much space.
The Home 400 steps things up with a six-driver, six-amplifier setup, plus dedicated up-firing drivers. That last part is worth paying attention to, because it ties into one of the bigger features in the new series: Dolby Atmos Music support.

For those who don't know, Dolby Atmos Music is meant to make songs sound more open and dimensional, instead of feeling flat or boxed in. That does not automatically mean every track will suddenly sound dramatic, but it does suggest Denon wants these speakers to do more than play background music while you cook dinner or answer email.
At the top of the range, the Home 600 is the one built to make the biggest impression. It includes dual opposing 6.5-inch woofers, along with tweeters, midrange drivers, and up-firing drivers. Denon also says it has a built-in subwoofer system, which should help it deliver deeper bass and a larger sense of scale than the smaller models.

If you just want the quick version, here is how Denon positions the three speakers:

Connectivity is another big part of the pitch. Denon is not locking you into one way of listening, which is always good to see. Across the new Home models, you get:
That means you can stream music the usual way, plug in a source directly, or build these into a larger multi-room setup. HEOS remains the backbone of that system, and Denon says the new speakers can work with up to 64 HEOS-compatible products across 32 zones. In other words, you can keep music moving from room to room, or play different things in different parts of the house.

The speakers also support high-resolution streaming services through the HEOS app, including TIDAL, Amazon Music HD, and Qobuz. Denon is also tying the lineup into its broader ecosystem, including the recently announced DP-500BT Bluetooth turntable, which could let you push vinyl playback out to other rooms without much hassle.
Pricing lands at:
The new Denon Home 200, 400, and 600 look like a more clearly organized update to the company’s wireless speaker strategy. The design has been cleaned up, the feature set is broad enough for modern streaming habits, and the three-model structure makes it easier to tell which speaker is meant for which kind of room. The bigger question, of course, is how they sound in real homes, but on paper, Denon’s new lineup looks built to make whole-home audio feel a little more straightforward.
Related Reading:
Privacy Policy
Terms and Conditions - Affiliate Policy
Home Security
© Copyright 2008-2026.
11816 Inwood Rd #1211, Dallas, TX 75244