Why the UGG Sheepskin Earmuffs with Embroidered Logo Holds Up
These UGG earmuffs wrap your ears in cloud-soft sheepskin with that signature chestnut warmth — the kind of cold-weather accessory that looks just as good in photos as it feels in a wind tunnel.
Every winter I do a quiet audit of the cold-weather accessories I actually reach for versus the ones that looked good in October and haven't left the drawer since. The UGG earmuffs have been in the first category since I started testing them, and I want to talk about why — because it's not just brand loyalty doing the work.
The thing about UGG earmuffs specifically is that they solve a problem most cold-weather accessories ignore: the gap between looking put-together and actually being warm. A lot of stylish winter accessories are decorative at best. These are not. The sheepskin insulation is the same quality you'd expect from the brand's footwear — dense, naturally temperature-regulating, and soft enough that you're not dreading putting them on. That's a low bar that somehow a lot of products still fail to clear.
I wore the chestnut pair on a day that started at 28°F and ended in a light freezing drizzle, and two things stood out: one, my ears were warm the entire time without overheating, and two, the water-resistant exterior shrugged off the wet without leaving that damp-fur smell some natural materials develop. That's a functional win that's easy to overlook in a product review but becomes very relevant on a miserable Tuesday in February.
From a styling perspective, the back-band silhouette is doing a lot of heavy lifting. It keeps your crown visible and your hair intact, which means these work whether you're wearing a sleek ponytail, a bun, or your hair down. The chestnut tone is one of those rare neutrals that reads warm rather than bland — it layers beautifully over camel coats, olive parkas, and even richer jewel tones without competing. The sand and grey mist options extend that versatility for cooler-toned wardrobes.
If you're searching 'UGG earmuffs' trying to decide whether the price is justified, here's my honest take: they're not a budget buy, and they're not trying to be. What you're paying for is material quality that holds up across multiple seasons, a silhouette that works across different styling scenarios, and the kind of warmth that makes you actually want to go outside in January. For the person who invests in a few key winter accessories rather than a pile of disposable ones, these belong on the shortlist.