The best sounds for your commute
Finding the right background sound can transform your commuting experience. This activity engages your Transition + Decompression + Environmental Masking cognitive systems, which respond best to specific types of ambient sound.
Research says: Natural sounds shift the nervous system from fight-or-flight to rest-and-digest mode in under 7 minutes. The effect is automatic and strongest in people who are already stressed.
— Scientific Reports (2017)
Recommended sounds
rain sounds
On trains and buses, rain masks the unpredictable noise of public transport. For drivers, rain creates a contemplative atmosphere during traffic.
Recommended: 45-60 dBbrown noise
For subway and underground commutes where engine noise is loud and low-frequency. Brown noise smooths the rumble into a consistent, predictable background.
Recommended: 50-65 dBforest sounds
Use different sounds for each direction. Morning: birdsong and forest (energising). Evening: rain or fireplace (calming). The acoustic shift helps your brain switch modes.
Recommended: 35-50 dBTry it now
Listen on Softly
Pro tip
Use your commute sound as a transition ritual — the same way you'd change clothes between work and home. Morning sound = "activating." Evening sound = "winding down." After 2 weeks, your nervous system starts responding to the sound itself.
Frequently Asked Questions
Should I use noise-cancelling headphones on my commute?
For public transport, ANC headphones + ambient sound is the best combination. The ANC removes 20-30 dB of transit noise, and the ambient sound covers the remainder. This lets you commute at lower volumes than you'd need without ANC — protecting your hearing over thousands of commute hours.
What does research say about sounds for commuting?
Natural sounds shift the nervous system from fight-or-flight to rest-and-digest mode in under 7 minutes. The effect is automatic and strongest in people who are already stressed. (Gould van Praag et al., Scientific Reports, 2017)
What volume should I use for commuting?
For commuting, set your volume to 45-60 dB. This range is based on acoustic research — loud enough to mask distracting noise, quiet enough to avoid auditory fatigue during extended listening.