The best sounds for sleeping in a hotel room
Unfamiliar bed, corridor noise, elevator dings, the ice machine at 3 AM, HVAC cycling on and off. Hotel sleep is worse than home sleep for nearly everyone.
How sound helps
Sleep-Specific Masking: During sleep, your brain continues monitoring the environment for threats - it's how our ancestors survived nighttime predators. Sudden sounds (a car horn, a door slam) trigger micro-awakenings you may not remember but that fragment your sleep architecture. Continuous sound raises the "detection threshold," meaning a noise must be louder relative to the background to wake you. Pink noise is particularly effective: an ICU study found it reduced time to sleep onset by 40%.
Source: ICU sleep research / Northwestern University
Setup guide
Use the Softly app on your phone. Place phone on the nightstand, speaker facing up. Volume: loud enough to cover corridor noise but quiet enough to hear a fire alarm.
أصوات مُوصى بها
rain sounds
If you use rain at home, using it in the hotel provides acoustic continuity. Your Pavlovian sleep conditioning transfers to the unfamiliar environment.
Recommended: 40-50 dBpink noise
Covers corridor voices and elevator dings. The balanced frequency profile handles the variety of hotel noises.
Recommended: 40-55 dBbrown noise
For rooms facing a busy street. Brown noise's low-frequency emphasis handles traffic better than pink or white.
Recommended: 45-55 dBجرّب الآن
Listen on Softly
نصيحة احترافية
Download your sleep sounds before travelling — hotel WiFi is unreliable and streaming can buffer mid-sleep. Bring a small Bluetooth speaker for better coverage.
الأسئلة الشائعة
Why do I always sleep worse in hotels?
The "first-night effect" — your brain stays partially alert in unfamiliar environments, an ancient survival mechanism. Sound masking helps by making the environment acoustically familiar, especially if you use the same sound as at home.
How does sound help with hotel room?
Sleep-Specific Masking: During sleep, your brain continues monitoring the environment for threats - it's how our ancestors survived nighttime predators. Sudden sounds (a car horn, a door slam) trigger micro-awakenings you may not remember but that fragment your sleep architecture. Continuous sound raises the "detection threshold," meaning a noise must be louder relative to the background to wake you. Pink noise is particularly effective: an ICU study found it reduced time to sleep onset by 40%.
What volume should I use for hotel room?
For hotel room, set your volume to 40-50 dB. This range is based on acoustic research — loud enough to mask distracting noise, quiet enough to avoid auditory fatigue during extended listening.