Sony Bravia TVs — particularly the X90K, X95K, A80K, and A90J OLED series — have excellent eARC support, but their CEC implementation can be picky about third-party soundbars. Sony's own soundbar lineup has a significant advantage here: Acoustic Center Sync, which turns the TV's speakers into the center channel of your surround setup. Here is what pairs reliably and how to get it working.
Quick answer
- Use HDMI 3 or HDMI 4 — Sony Bravia eARC port is usually HDMI 3; check the label on the back
- Enable BRAVIA Sync (HDMI-CEC): Settings → Remote & Accessories → Bravia Sync Settings → BRAVIA Sync → On
- Set audio output to "Audio System": Settings → Display & Sound → Audio Output → select your soundbar
- Enable eARC: Settings → Display & Sound → Audio Output → eARC → Auto
- Sony soundbars get Acoustic Center Sync — uses TV speakers as center channel for true 7.1.2+ surround
What makes Sony Bravia different
Sony Bravia TVs run Google TV (on newer models) or Android TV, and use a CEC protocol called BRAVIA Sync. Setup issues with third-party soundbars usually stem from BRAVIA Sync not being enabled or conflicting with Dolby Atmos format negotiation. The fix is almost always: enable BRAVIA Sync, power cycle with HDMI cable unplugged, TV on first.
Sony's own soundbar lineup has a major advantage: Acoustic Center Sync, which combines the TV's built-in speakers with the soundbar's rear channels to create a proper 7.1.2 or 9.1.4 surround experience without wireless rear speakers. This only works with Sony HT-A series soundbars.
Sony Bravia XR processor models (X90K, X95K, A80K, A90J, etc.) also support 360 Spatial Sound Mapping with compatible Sony soundbars, which creates virtual overhead channels even without ceiling-bounce drivers.
What to look for
eARC over HDMI is essential for Dolby Atmos from built-in streaming apps. Regular ARC limits you to basic Dolby Digital.
BRAVIA Sync compatibility — Sony's own soundbars pair without issues. Sonos and Samsung are the most reliably tested third-party brands.
Acoustic Center Sync support — If you want to use your TV speakers as a center channel, you need a Sony HT-A series soundbar (HT-A5000 or HT-A7000).
Dolby Atmos + DTS:X decoding — Sony Bravia supports both formats over eARC. A soundbar that decodes both gives you the most content compatibility.
Our picks
Best overall: Sony HT-A7000
The HT-A7000 is the definitive Sony Bravia pairing. Acoustic Center Sync turns your TV into the center channel, 360 Spatial Sound Mapping creates virtual overhead audio, and the BRAVIA Sync integration is completely seamless — auto input switching, volume control, and standby all work without configuration. Dolby Atmos and DTS:X decoding is handled onboard. This is what Sony designed the Bravia XR models to pair with.
- Sony HT-A7000 on Amazon (paid link)
Best mid-range: Sony HT-A5000
If the HT-A7000 is more than you need, the HT-A5000 delivers 90% of the experience at a lower price. Same Acoustic Center Sync, same BRAVIA Sync integration, same eARC reliability. The main difference is fewer built-in channels and slightly less power. For most living rooms it's the better value.
- Sony HT-A5000 on Amazon (paid link)
Best third-party: Sonos Arc
If you're not interested in Sony's ecosystem features or already have Sonos speakers, the Sonos Arc is the most reliable third-party option on Sony Bravia TVs. eARC is stable, Atmos passthrough is clean, and it doesn't fight with BRAVIA Sync. Trueplay room calibration adapts the sound to your room's acoustics automatically.
- Sonos Arc on Amazon (paid link)
Strong alternative: Samsung HW-Q990D
The Samsung Q990D has the best raw surround performance at this price tier and has reliable eARC compatibility with Sony Bravia TVs. You lose Acoustic Center Sync and 360 Spatial Sound, but the wireless rear speakers and 11.1.4 channel count are hard to beat for home theater use.
- Samsung HW-Q990D on Amazon (paid link)
Setup steps for Sony Bravia TVs
- Connect the HDMI cable from your soundbar's ARC out to the Sony TV's eARC/ARC port (usually HDMI 3)
- Enable BRAVIA Sync: Settings → Remote & Accessories → Bravia Sync Settings → BRAVIA Sync → On
- Set audio output: Settings → Display & Sound → Audio Output → select your soundbar
- Enable eARC: Settings → Display & Sound → Audio Output → eARC → Auto
- Set audio format: Settings → Display & Sound → Audio Output → Digital Audio Output → Auto
- Power cycle: Turn off TV and soundbar, unplug HDMI for 30 seconds, reconnect, TV on first
The cable matters
Sony Bravia XR models need a certified Ultra High Speed HDMI 2.1 cable for stable eARC. The typical symptom of a marginal cable is Atmos connecting on first boot then dropping to PCM after 10-15 minutes. The Zeskit Maya is the most consistently recommended option:
Troubleshooting
Sound still from TV speakers: Set Audio Output to your soundbar specifically, not "TV Speaker". Confirm BRAVIA Sync is on.
eARC not connecting: Full power cycle with HDMI cable disconnected. TV on first, wait for home screen, then soundbar.
Dolby Atmos not showing: Set Digital Audio Output to "Auto" in Sony audio settings. Some Bravia models default to PCM which prevents Atmos handshake.
Acoustic Center Sync not working: Requires Sony HT-A series soundbar, firmware updated on both devices, and BRAVIA Sync enabled. Third-party soundbars do not support this feature.
FAQ
Do I need a Sony soundbar to use Acoustic Center Sync? Yes. Acoustic Center Sync is Sony-exclusive and requires an HT-A5000 or HT-A7000 (or SA-RS5 rear speakers). Third-party soundbars work well with Bravia TVs but won't access this feature.
Which Sony Bravia models support eARC? Sony Bravia TVs from 2019 onward generally support eARC. XR-processor models (X90K, X95K, A80K, A90J, etc.) have the most reliable eARC implementation. Older models may support only standard ARC.
Will a Sony soundbar work with non-Sony TVs? Yes, but without Acoustic Center Sync or 360 Spatial Sound Mapping. The HT-A5000 and HT-A7000 work as standard eARC soundbars on Samsung, LG, or any other TV brand.
Why does my Sony Bravia show Dolby Atmos but my soundbar doesn't? The Bravia TV may be processing Atmos internally. Set Digital Audio Output to "Auto" (not PCM or Dolby Digital) so the raw bitstream passes through to the soundbar for decoding.
