Headphones · Side-by-side

HiFiMan Arya Unveiled versus Meze 105 Silva

HiFiMan Arya Unveiled scores 0.4 higher and costs $800 more. Meze 105 Silva is the budget option, HiFiMan Arya Unveiled the step-up.

HiFiMan Arya Unveiled planar magnetic open-back over-ear headphones - left side of a head-to-head comparison with Meze 105 Silva

HiFiMan

Arya Unveiled

An open-back planar that strips away the outer grill entirely - exposing the driver to deliver dead-silent backgrounds, holographic imaging, and the smoothest Arya treble yet.

Score 9.1 +0.4
Verdict Highly Recommended
Price $1,299 +$800
Reviewed
Read the full Arya Unveiled review
Meze 105 Silva dynamic driver open-back over-ear headphones - right side of a head-to-head comparison with HiFiMan Arya Unveiled

Meze

105 Silva

A $499 open-back dynamic with hand-polished walnut cups, a custom 50mm carbon-fiber driver, and a warm, fun, easy-to-drive tuning that punches well above its price.

Score 8.7 -0.4
Verdict Highly Recommended
Price $499 -$800
Reviewed
Read the full 105 Silva review

Sound signature, overlaid

Each axis is positioned from the review body itself. The same word-frequency model anchors every review on the catalogue.

  • Warm Bright
  • Relaxed Analytical
  • Polite Aggressive
  • Lean Bass-heavy
  • Intimate Wide stage
HiFiMan Arya Unveiled Meze 105 Silva

Pros & cons, side by side

Arya Unveiled

Pros

  • Grill-less design eliminates micro-reflections off protective metal
  • Stealth Magnets pass sound waves without turbulence
  • Nanometer-thickness diaphragm - extremely fast and detailed
  • Most comfortable Arya yet - lighter, less clamp
  • Suspension strap with zero hotspots over hours
  • Smoothed-out, mature treble - no glassy edge
  • Holographic imaging with dead-silent background
  • New fabric-sleeved crystalline copper stock cable

Cons

  • Driver fully exposed - real damage risk if mishandled
  • Magnetic Veils required when not in use - new ritual
  • Glossy plastic earcups - fingerprint magnet
  • Plastic construction feels less premium than HE1000 series
  • Still needs a real amp - 94dB sensitivity is misleading
  • Less mid-bass bloom than Arya Organic - bass-heads may want more

105 Silva

Pros

  • Hand-polished walnut earcups with intricate radial grille
  • Custom 50mm driver with carbon-fiber W-dome and titanium torus
  • Self-adjusting elastic suspension headband - zero hotspots
  • Light 350g weight for a full-size wooden headphone
  • Plush, breathable velour earpads - glasses-friendly
  • Modular, fully serviceable - assembled with screws, not glue
  • Easy to drive (42Ω, 112dB) - USB-C DAC dongle included
  • Waterproof hard case + braided stock cable - no upgrades needed

Cons

  • Musical, warm tuning - not a flaw-revealing reference
  • Mid-bass is slightly forward - flat-tuning purists won't love it
  • Lower mids step back behind a small upper-mid lift
  • Treble has noticeable extra sparkle - bright-sensitive ears beware
  • Meze's optional $250 upgrade cable is hard to justify over the stock
  • Open-back design leaks sound - not for shared spaces

Which one to buy

Short version: the rubric picks the HiFiMan Arya Unveiled, but the right answer depends on what you are listening for, what is upstream, and what your budget actually allows. Here is how each side wins.

Pick the Arya Unveiled if

HiFiMan Arya Unveiled

  • You want grill-less design eliminates micro-reflections off protective metal
  • You want stealth Magnets pass sound waves without turbulence
  • You can stretch the budget: $800 buys a 0.4-point step up on the same chain
  • Verdict matters more than price: it earned Highly Recommended (9.1/10), 0.4 above the alternative
Read the full Arya Unveiled review

Pick the 105 Silva if

Meze 105 Silva

  • You want hand-polished walnut earcups with intricate radial grille
  • You want custom 50mm driver with carbon-fiber W-dome and titanium torus
  • Budget matters: it costs $800 less and the score gap is 0.4 points
Read the full 105 Silva review

How they were tested head-to-head

Both the HiFiMan Arya Unveiled and the Meze 105 Silva ran on the same chain, driven from the same Denafrips Hades 12th headphone amplifier, fed from the Denafrips Enyo 15th Anniversary R-2R DAC, sourced from the Hermes 12th digital transport. The two pieces were volume-matched at the output and swapped between the same set of reference recordings (acoustic, vocal-led, dense modern, and large-scale orchestral) so the listener compared like for like every session. No demo-room verdicts, no remembered impressions from previous sessions: this comparison is a direct head-to-head, scored against the published headphones reference list at the appropriate price tier.

What the 0.4-point score gap actually means

A 0.4-point gap is the threshold at which most listeners pick the higher-scored piece blind on any reference track. The HiFiMan Arya Unveiled is the cleaner technical performer here: more resolution, better-controlled bass, or a more even tonal balance, depending on the category. The lower-scored piece is the budget or character pick, not the equal-but-different one.

What would flip the verdict

The HiFiMan Arya Unveiled wins on the rubric, but the Meze 105 Silva becomes the right pick under three conditions. First, when system fit favours it: if your amplifier, room, or source has a known character that pairs better with this piece than with the higher scorer. Second, when one of the cons listed for the HiFiMan Arya Unveiled is a hard disqualifier in your context (drive requirements, ergonomics, connectivity, or footprint). Third, when budget is genuinely binding: the Meze 105 Silva is the cheaper of the pair, and that gap can fund the next upgrade upstream. Outside those three, the higher score is the safer recommendation.

Full methodology, the published reference list, and the scoring rubric live on the about page. The reviews each include their own loaner disclosure, comparison list, and listening-window dates.

Common questions about this comparison

  1. Which is better overall, the HiFiMan Arya Unveiled or the Meze 105 Silva?

    The HiFiMan Arya Unveiled scores higher on the catalogue's rubric: 9.1/10 vs 8.7/10, a 0.4-point gap measured by the same listener on the same chain. "Better overall" is a meaningful claim here because both pieces are scored against the published reference list for headphones, so the gap is not a calibration drift between reviewers: it represents real, comparative performance difference. The lower-scored piece can still be the right buy under specific constraints (budget, system fit, ergonomics), which the section above covers.

  2. Which is better value, the HiFiMan Arya Unveiled or the Meze 105 Silva?

    The Meze 105 Silva is the cheaper of the pair (by $800 on most listings) and the score difference is only 0.4 points, so the dollar-per-point math favours the cheaper piece on this comparison alone. Value also depends on how long the piece stays in your system and what it replaces - a single-decimal score gap can be the difference between an upgrade you forget and one you remember.

  3. Which is better for long home listening sessions?

    Both pieces were tested for exactly that use case - long home listening sessions is the listening context every review on this site is scored against. The HiFiMan Arya Unveiled performed better in those conditions overall, 0.4 points ahead. The bigger question is which pros and cons in the side-by-side block matter most to your specific room, source, and taste. The reviews themselves go into the long-form detail.

  4. Were the HiFiMan Arya Unveiled and the Meze 105 Silva tested at the same time?

    Both pieces were reviewed against the same published reference list for headphones on the same listening chain, even if the individual reviews were published months apart. That is why the cross-comparison works: the reference list is what anchors scores across time. When a new piece enters the reference list and resets what a 9.0 means, older scores are re-checked and re-anchored. Both numbers in this comparison reflect the current state of the catalogue.

  5. Are both pieces "Highly Recommended" tier, or different?

    Both pieces share the Highly Recommended verdict, which means they are in the same recommendation bracket but not necessarily at the same point inside it. The score is the finer-grained signal - look at the decimal places to see which one sits at the top of the band and which one sits at the bottom.