Features & Compatibility
Price: $17.96
(as of Mar 29, 2026 09:50:42 UTC – Details)
Product description
Bluetooth Model

How to Pair Bluetooth

Used in old speakers

Used in Car

Technical specification
Bluetooth name H222 Support Bluetooth Bluetooth V5.3+EDR Power supply USB 5V power supply Output USB or 3.5mm Audio interface working range 10m/33ft Sound stereo sound
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Customer Reviews
3.8 out of 5 stars 80
4.1 out of 5 stars 306
4.1 out of 5 stars 306
3.8 out of 5 stars 80
3.8 out of 5 stars 80
Price
$17.92$17.92 $9.99$9.99 $12.99$12.99 $12.96$12.96 $17.96$17.96
Support Bluetooth
Bluetooth V 5.3+EDR Bluetooth V 5.3+EDR Bluetooth V 2.1+EDR Bluetooth V 5.3+EDR Bluetooth V 5.3+EDR
working range
33ft 33ft 33ft 33ft 33ft
Bluetooth Audio Adapter for Music:This Bluetooth music receiver is the perfect solution for your various non-Bluetooth home audio systems or car speakers to achieve the ideal wireless audio.You could have an excellent listening experience with crystal clear,high fidelity at any place indoor.
Easy to Use:Simply connect your speaker with our device,immediately transform your speakers into a fashionable wireless bluetooth speaker.
Long Wireless Range: Stream and control your music with a reliable connection from up to 10 meters.
USB Power Supply:Charge it on the USB port and connect it to your audio device via 3.5mm aux audio cable(included) while using, never worry it will run out of power while listening to music.
Note: This is a aux Bluetooth receiver,it cannot be paired with Bluetooth headphones/speakers.

Dee –
Perfect
This little device works great with my android. I just bought a 2011 CRV and I was so disappointed that the aux plug was broken and the USB did not work for my phone. It worked with iPhone for some reason but I’m not about to change my phone so I tried this after some research and it didn’t disappoint. Sounds crystal clear and doesn’t disconnect. I took a 12 hour road trip and it worked perfectly the whole time.
Scott –
Don’t Even Think About Getting One of These
Sound quality is really, really bad and not even comparable to a normal aux connector. I bought this because I wanted to be lazy and not replace the aux port in my car. I’d compare the audio quality of this to AM radio. This was so bad that I ended up replacing the aux port which honestly wasn’t bad at all, so I don’t know what I was afraid of.If you’re considering on getting one of these, don’t do it.
Katie Hardin –
Great fit!
Purchased a USB mini male to USB micro female for my 2014 Dodge Charger. Great work around if you know what I mean
Amazon Customer –
Buen producto
Aunque la conexión disminuye la calidad del audio, es una buen dispositivo
Jason Manley 256 –
Hit or miss with connecting
Doesn’t connect easily. Takes some effort every time.
J U –
Very nice
Use it to stream Sirius thru my stereo.
Glenn King –
Worked great in my older Nissan Frontier
The YETOR USB Bluetooth Car Adapter, Wireless Audio Adapter Car Kit Music Receiver for Home, Car Stereo Sound System, Portable Speakers (H222) worked great in my older Nissan Frontier. I’m not a big fan of commercials, so I don’t really listen to the radio and was never a fan of paying for XM which had commercials anyway. I had been using a USB stick (in the armrest box) with music loaded on it so I could choose the artist, album, and songs I wanted to hear when I wanted to hear them. I sometimes used a wired USB to AUX adapter jack (on the radio face) with my phone, but the wires were always in the way. I ordered this not knowing if it would work as a BT stand-alone receiver in the armrest USB port or if I would have to use it powered from a phone charger plugged into the AUX jack anyway. I was happy when it worked to wirelessly connect my phone to the USB port in the arm rest. I can now use Amazon music and play what I want, when I want, anything I want that’s available from Amazon music.
Patrick Everett –
Sadly, not recognized by my car stereo’s USB port
As stated, the transmitter would connect to my phone but would not be recognized by my car’s stereo system at all, other than trying to read “files” on the usb stick, which I’m assuming were firmware or connection logs.