ReSound Vivia™ 9 Review
A Long-Time Hearing Aid User’s Experience



Meet Michelle, 52.
She was born with hearing loss and has been wearing hearing aids for over 3 decades.
My History with Hearing Loss
I was born with hearing loss, but nobody figured that out for years. I grew up missing things. Words, jokes, directions. People assumed I wasn’t paying attention, or wasn’t smart enough to catch on. In high school, I finally got tested. I thought I was too cool for hearing aids.
By nineteen, I couldn’t function anymore and had to get help.
My first fitting wasn’t much of a fitting. I could only afford one hearing aid, even though I needed two. Nobody explained what that would mean. They took my budget, handed me a device, and sent me out the door. No conversation about what it would feel like to hear from only one side. No curiosity about what my life actually needed.
I thought that was how it worked.
Almost ten years later, I finally got two hearing aids, and the difference was staggering. I could follow conversations again. I stopped zoning out. I was able to actually start participating in life again.
But even then, the care was minimal. When my aids died, I assumed it was my fault. Nobody had told me about professional cleaning or the tiny vacuums that keep them clean and working better than I could do at home.

Why I’m Wearing the ReSound Vivia 9
I was already happy with what I was wearing.
I’ve been wearing the same brand my audiologist Dr. Nichole Sorensen at Lakeside Hearing first fitted me with back in 2014. I tried others along the way. I always went back. Your brain adapts deeply to a specific sound processing style and everything else feels like a detour.
So I upgraded within that brand twice over the years. My last upgrade was 2021 technology. A lot has changed since then.
When it came time to choose a device for my own hearing story here on Hearing Empowered™, I tried to open my mind a little. Nichole & Claire thought the ReSound Vivia might be worth trying, partly because I’m always talking about my nervous system and how sound affects it.
Brands don’t pay to be featured here. They provide devices for review and I make my own call. So I had my pick, and I picked these.

The moment I put the Vivia in, my nervous system relaxed.
I didn’t go looking for that. I didn’t even know I was bracing until I wasn’t anymore.
I immediately took them to the most rigorous testing environment I could think of: Costco. Cart wheels on concrete, voices coming from everywhere, ambient sound hitting you from every angle. I walked in expecting to white-knuckle it like I always had, because I’d spent thirty years assuming that level of overwhelm was just the deal with hearing aids.
It felt almost peaceful. I heard every word Steve said even when he was ahead of me in the aisle. I was genuinely shocked.
I didn’t realize how much of the work I had been doing until I wasn’t doing it anymore.
To be fair, a lot has happened in hearing aid technology since 2021. This wasn’t a subtle upgrade. The gap between what I was wearing and what’s available now is genuinely significant, and I wouldn’t have known that without trying it. But before I get into what the Vivia actually does, it helps to understand what I need my hearing aids to do, because my listening profile is pretty specific.
What I Need My Hearing Aids to Do?
My requirements are specific because my loss is significant and my life is full.

What Are the ReSound Vivia™ Hearing Aids?
The Vivia is ReSound’s current flagship, and the headlining technology is a Deep Neural Network trained on over 13.5 million sentences mixed with background noise, traffic, cafeteria environments, and other real-world acoustic chaos. The goal is to pull speech out of noise rather than just turning down everything around it.
The Vivia 9 comes in a microRIC form factor, a tiny receiver-in-canal design with the processor sitting behind the ear. For a fully-featured device with 30 hours of battery life, the size is genuinely impressive.
The dual processor setup is worth understanding. One chip, called the 360, continuously scans the environment and adjusts directionality. The second runs the Deep Neural Network, working on the signal-to-noise ratio in real time. These two processes run simultaneously, which is different from how older single-chip aids worked.
The DNN feature requires you to manually select the “Hear in Noise” program, and it works best when you’re facing the person you’re trying to hear. That’s a real-world limitation worth knowing upfront.
The Vivia 9 connects via Bluetooth LE Audio for newer iPhones and Android devices, meaning better sound quality with lower battery drain. It also supports Auracast, which will eventually allow direct connection to broadcast audio in venues. The ReSound Smart 3D app handles volume and program control, a three-band equalizer, tinnitus masking, and a find-my-hearing-aids feature.

The Real World Test
Thirty-plus years of hearing aids. Noisy restaurants, busy events, phone calls, everyday life. Here’s what I’m actually finding.

Are the ReSound Vivia 9 Hearing Aids Worth It?
For my hearing profile, yes, with the right fitting.
The speech-in-noise improvement is real and meaningful at this level of loss. The frequency lowering is working. The size and comfort are genuinely impressive for what these devices are doing. The sound quality is accurate and rich enough that I’m not grieving what I left behind.
What I’d tell anyone considering these: the fitting matters enormously. These aids have more potential than they’ll show you out of the box. Real Ear Measurement isn’t optional, it’s where the actual performance lives. An audiologist who knows what they’re doing with ReSound’s programming will get you somewhere noticeably better than a quick default setup.
And if your biggest challenge is speech in noise, which it is for most of us with significant loss, the Vivia 9 is genuinely worth a trial. It’s not the only contender. Other brands have amazing technology now and each approaches it differently. What works for my audiogram won’t automatically be right for yours.
Should You Get the ReSound Vivia Hearing Aids?
Honestly, I can only tell you what they have done for me.
I can tell you what they’ve done for me. Moderate to profound bilateral sensorineural loss, thirty-plus years of hearing aid experience, active life, all-day wear. That’s my context. Yours is different. And that’s the whole point.
The only person who can actually answer this question is an independent audiologist with access to the leading brands and knowledge of your audiogram. Someone who will do a proper fitting with Real Ear Measurement, understand how you live, and tell you honestly whether the Vivia 9 serves your hearing profile or whether something else would do more.
That conversation starts with a full diagnostic hearing assessment. Everything else comes after.


