What Noise Is Best for Tinnitus? The Evidence on Sound Therapy

By Rafael Farias · 5 min read · Updated 2026-05-24
Short answer

Sound therapy is a mainstream part of tinnitus management, but the rigorous evidence is thinner than the marketing implies. Broadband sound (white or similar) does not cure tinnitus; masking and habituation-based therapy may reduce how intrusive it feels, yet a Cochrane review found no strong evidence of efficacy and clinical guidelines list it only as optional. Effects vary, and persistent tinnitus warrants seeing an audiologist.

A case where sound genuinely belongs in the conversation

Tinnitus — the perception of ringing or buzzing without an external source — is one of the few areas where using sound is mainstream clinical practice rather than wellness hype. The idea is straightforward: adding gentle background sound can make the internal noise less noticeable and, over time, help your brain tune it out. That's a reasonable, well-motivated approach. The honest part is being clear about how strong the evidence actually is.

What the evidence says — and doesn't

Sound therapy appears in the official clinical practice guideline for tinnitus as an option clinicians "may recommend" — recognized, but deliberately not a strong endorsement (Tunkel et al. 2014). And a Cochrane systematic review of masking found no strong evidence of efficacy, noting that the available trials were few and of low quality (Hobson et al. 2012). That combination is important: sound therapy is legitimate and widely used, but the rigorous proof is thinner than the marketing around tinnitus apps suggests. It helps many people feel better without strong evidence that it changes the tinnitus itself.

The evidence, graded

Claim Evidence Best source
Sound therapy / masking is part of mainstream tinnitus care Clinical guideline lists sound therapy as an option clinicians may recommend. Guideline-recognized Tunkel 2014
Masking has strong proven efficacy Cochrane review: no strong evidence of efficacy; trials were few and low-quality. Weak evidence Hobson 2012
A specific noise color cures tinnitus No sound cures tinnitus; the aim is reduced intrusiveness and habituation. Not established

How to use sound for tinnitus

Practical principles matter more than picking a color. Use sound at a low level that partially blends with the tinnitus rather than completely covering it — full masking can work against habituation. Soft broadband noise or natural sounds are common choices; pick what's comfortable. Most importantly, treat persistent tinnitus as a medical issue: see an audiologist, especially for one-sided, pulsatile, sudden, or hearing-loss-associated tinnitus. This is informational, not medical advice.

Common questions

What noise is best for tinnitus?

There is no single proven "best" color. Broadband sounds like white noise, or soft natural sounds, are commonly used to make tinnitus less noticeable. The goal is comfortable partial masking, not drowning it out — and effectiveness varies a lot by person.

Does sound therapy cure tinnitus?

No. Sound therapy does not cure tinnitus. It can reduce how intrusive the sound feels and support habituation over time, but a Cochrane review found no strong evidence of efficacy and clinical guidelines list it as an optional, not essential, intervention.

Should I use sound at night?

Many people find low-level background sound helps them ignore tinnitus while falling asleep. Keep it quiet and comfortable. If tinnitus disrupts sleep regularly, see an audiologist about a structured plan.

When should I see a professional?

New, one-sided, pulsatile, or sudden tinnitus, or tinnitus with hearing loss or dizziness, should be evaluated promptly. Persistent tinnitus is worth a proper audiology assessment rather than self-managing with apps alone.

Sources

  1. Hobson J, Chisholm E, El Refaie A (2012). Sound therapy (masking) in the management of tinnitus in adults. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews. doi:10.1002/14651858.CD006371.pub3
  2. Tunkel DE et al. (2014). Clinical Practice Guideline: Tinnitus. Otolaryngology–Head and Neck Surgery. doi:10.1177/0194599814545325

This article is informational and not medical advice. Effects of sound are population-level and vary by individual.