The best sounds for a noisy apartment

You can hear everything — the neighbours' TV, footsteps upstairs, doors slamming, traffic outside. You can't soundproof your apartment, and earplugs are uncomfortable. Every unexpected noise fragments your focus or wakes you up.

How sound helps

How Sound Masking Works: Your brain is wired to monitor for unexpected sounds - it's an ancient survival mechanism. When a dog barks, a door slams, or a neighbour's TV bleeds through the wall, your auditory system flags it as a potential threat, triggering a micro-stress response. Continuous ambient sound (rain, pink noise, brown noise) creates a consistent "floor" that makes these interruptions less detectable. The disruptive sound doesn't disappear - it becomes lost in the background, like a whisper at a party.

Source: General acoustic masking principles

Setup guide

Place speakers between you and the noise source (near the wall/window/ceiling where noise enters). The sound needs to be "between" you and the disruption, not behind you. For sleep: speaker on the nightstand, facing the noise source.

Recommended sounds

🤎

brown noise

Concentrates energy in the low frequencies where most apartment noise lives (footsteps, bass, HVAC, traffic rumble). The most effective single sound for urban masking.

Recommended: 45-60 dB
🌧️

rain sounds

Broad-spectrum masking with enough low-end energy to cover bass-heavy noise. More pleasant than pure brown noise for long exposure.

Recommended: 45-60 dB
🩷

pink noise

Balanced masking across all frequencies. Better than white noise for extended listening (less treble fatigue).

Recommended: 45-55 dB

Try it now

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brown noise

Softly

Pro tip

Brown noise + rain layered together covers both low-frequency (traffic, footsteps) and mid/high-frequency (voices, TV) noise simultaneously.

Frequently Asked Questions

What volume should I play to mask apartment noise?

Just loud enough that the disruptive noise becomes difficult to distinguish from the background. Start at 45 dB and increase gradually. You shouldn't need more than 60 dB — if you do, consider combining brown noise with rain for broader coverage.

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