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Fitting Styles: IIC, CIC
Warranty: 5 years
The Rexton Reach Custom 40 hearing aids are designed to elevate your listening experience with beneficial features like Voice Stabiliser technology. This system effectively manages background noise, ensuring that voices come through at the perfect volume for clear, natural sound. Whether you're in a busy meeting or social gathering, you’ll have no problem keeping up with conversations, no matter the challenges of the environment.
The Reach Custom 40 are sleek, compact, and fits comfortably in your ear canal, offering a discreet hearing solution. You’ll be able to enjoy conversations without anyone really noticing your hearing aids. Rexton Reach custom hearing aids present a great choice for those seeking a bespoke hearing solution packed with handy features. The sound processing has seen significant improvements when compared to earlier Rexton models, offering a more precise and natural listening experience.
Rexton hearing aids are also one of the few available that feature tinnitus-notch therapy, providing valuable relief for those suffering from tinnitus. Built with durability in mind, these hearing aids are designed to last between 7 and 10 years, ensuring long-term reliability and performance.
Key features include:
The Multi-Voice Focus technology continually scans your environment 1,000 times per second, using four distinct focus beams to ensure conversations flow smoothly. It prioritises the voices around you while tracking quieter sounds, all without needing to switch modes or experience any delays.
The Voice Stabiliser works to amplify all voices within the focus beams clearly, even when their volume varies. It manages sound compression for the best signal-to-noise ratio (SNR), letting you concentrate on the clearest voices and minimising background interference.
The Reach Custom 40 supports MFi and ASHA protocols, offering a reliable connection to your smartphone. It’s future-ready, just a firmware update will enable Bluetooth LE Audio compatibility, keeping your devices connected as technology evolves. Built to withstand the rigours of daily life and tough environments, Rexton hearing aids are rigorously tested for durability. No matter what your day throws at you, these hearing aids can handle it.
The Reach Custom 40 is fully compatible with the Rexton hearing aid app, giving you complete control over your settings. You can easily adjust the volume or settings anytime with Rexton Assist, and enjoy the convenience of remote audiology support, no clinic visit is required. Choose from three stylish colours: Black, Brown, and Mocha. Available in both IIC and CIC In-Ear models.
The Custom 40 doesn’t feature the Auto Echo Reducer, which automatically detects and reduces unwanted reverberation in your surroundings. While this is a helpful tool in certain environments, the Reach Custom 40 still provides outstanding sound quality with its other advanced technologies, allowing you to focus on daily activities without concern for background noise.
Other features not included in this level are the Reverb Reducer and fewer music enhancer settings. The Reverb Reducer gives more ease and comfort when listening in settings with many hard surfaces.
Call us free on 0800 567 7621 to chat about these digital hearing aids, what they can do for your hearing loss, and whether they are the right hearing aids for you. Please note, that there will be an additional surcharge of £125 if we are pairing a single hearing aid with an existing aid bought from another company where we are taking over the aftercare responsibilities and looking after both hearing aids.
Paul Harrison is an audiology expert at Hearing Aid UK, with over 20 years of audiology experience and a member of the British Society of Hearing Aid Audiologists Council (BSHAA) between 2015 - 2020.
Here, at Hearing Aid UK, we offer a wide range of hearing aids available on the market - keeping up to date with the best and latest hearing aid technology.
We can support your hearing healthcare in clinic or in the comfort of your own home and with nationwide coverage, we will have an audiologist near you.
Whatever your hearing loss level, budget, or style our audiologists can help you find the perfect hearing solution for you.
Do not spend hundreds of pounds without getting a second opinion from us.
If you are looking at this page then it is likely that an audiologist has suggested that you purchase this particular hearing aid, so is this the best model for you?
In general, any audiologist will always be recommending to you the model that best suits your needs. Here is a useful checklist to make sure that is the case.
If in doubt, feel free to give us a call. That's what we're here for. In the meantime, read all about our review of the best hearing aids here
If you have significant hearing loss in both ears, you should be wearing two hearing aids. Here are the audiological reasons why:
Localisation: The brain decodes information from both ears and compares and contrasts them. By analysing the minuscule time delays as well as the difference in the loudness of each sound reaching the ears, the person is able to accurately locate a sound source. Simply put, if you have better hearing on one side than the other, you can't accurately tell what direction sounds are coming from.
Less amplification is required: A phenomenon known as “binaural summation” means that the hearing aids can be set at a lower and more natural volume setting than if you wore only one hearing aid.
Head shadow effect: High frequencies, the part of your hearing that gives clarity and meaning to speech sounds, cannot bend around your head. Only low frequencies can. Therefore if someone is talking on your unaided side you are likely to hear that they are speaking, but be unable to tell what they have said.
Noise reduction: The brain has its own built-in noise reduction which is only really effective when it is receiving information from both ears. If only one ear is aided, even with the best hearing aid in the world, it will be difficult for you to hear in background noise as your brain is trying to retain all of the sounds (including background noise) rather than filtering it out.
Sound quality: We are designed to hear in stereo. Only hearing from one side sounds a lot less natural to us.
Fancy some further reading on this topic? You can read about why two hearing aids are better than one in our article, hearing aids for both ears, here
For most people, the main benefit of a rechargeable hearing aid is simple convenience. We are used to plugging in our phones and other devices overnight for them to charge up. Here are some other pros and cons:
For anybody with poor dexterity or issues with their fingers, having a rechargeable aid makes a huge difference as normal hearing aid batteries are quite small and some people find them fiddly to change.
One downside is that if you forget to charge your hearing aid, then it is a problem that can't be instantly fixed. For most a 30-minute charge will get you at least two or three hours of hearing, but if you are the type of person who is likely to forget to plug them in regularly then you're probably better off with standard batteries.
Rechargeable aids are also a little bit bigger and are only available in Behind the Ear models.
Finally, just like with a mobile phone, the amount of charge you get on day one is not going to be the same as you get a few years down the line. Be sure to ask what the policy is with the manufacturer warranty when it comes to replacing the battery.
Looking for more information on rechargeable hearing aids? Read our dedicated page on the topic here
For most people, the answer is yes. But it's never that simple.
The majority of hearing problems affect the high frequencies a lot more than the low ones. Therefore open fitting hearing aids sound a lot more natural and ones that block your ears up can make your own voice sound like you are talking with your head in a bucket. Therefore in-ear aids tend to be less natural.
However the true answer is we can't tell until we have had a look in your ears to assess the size of your ear canal, and until we have tested your hearing to see which frequencies are being affected.
People with wider ear canals tend to have more flexibility, also there are open fitting modular CIC hearing aids now that do not block your ears.
There is also the age old rule to consider, that a hearing aid will not help you if it's sat in the drawer gathering dust. If the only hearing aid you would be happy wearing is one that people can't see, then that's what you should get.
Most people can adapt to any type of hearing aid, as long as they know what to expect. Have an honest conversation with your audiologist as to what your needs are.
Generally speaking, six or more. Unless it's none at all.
The number of channels a hearing aid has is often a simplistic way an audiologist will use to explain why one hearing aid is better than another, but channels are complex and it is really not that straightforward. Here are some reasons why:
Hearing aids amplify sounds of different frequencies by different amounts. Most people have lost more high frequencies than low and therefore need more amplification in the high frequencies. The range of sounds you hear are split into frequency bands or channels and the hearing aids are set to provide the right amount of hearing at each frequency level.
Less than six channels and this cannot be done with much accuracy, so six is the magic number. However, a six channel aid is typically very basic with few other features and is suitable only for hearing a single speaker in a quiet room. The number of channels is not what you should be looking at, it's more the rest of the technology that comes with them.
As a final note, different manufacturers have different approaches. One method is not necessarily better than any other. For example, some manufacturers have as many as 64 channels in their top aids. Most tend to have between 17 and 20. One manufacturer has no channels at all.
Hearing aids are easily lost, misplaced or damaged and typically are one of the most expensive personal possessions an individual can own. We offer hearing aid warranty coverage for £80 per year per aid. Find out more about this service we provide here
When we refer to a product as 'Latest Launch', we mean it is the latest to be released on the market.
When we refer to a product as 'New', we mean that the product is the newest hearing aid model on the market.
When we refer to a product as 'Superseded', we mean that there is a newer range available which replaces and improves on this product.
When we refer to a product as an 'Older Model', we mean that it is has been superseded by at least two more recent hearing aid ranges.