Thunderstorm Sounds — 5 Hours
5 Hours of thunderstorm sounds — no ads, no buffering. Free with sleep timer.
Listen now
Curated long-form thunderstorm sounds from YouTube. Click to play — no need to leave this page.
Thunderstorm Sounds for 5 hours
Thunderstorm Sounds for 5 hours is ideal for extended work shift, full study day, background coverage. Five hours covers an extended work shift or a full study day with breaks.
Thunderstorms combine multiple masking elements in a single soundscape: the broadband spectrum of rain, the low-frequency impact of thunder, and the unpredictable-yet-patterned dynamic range that prevents auditory habituation fatigue. Distant thunder (not close) adds dramatic texture without the startle response — the brain processes it as an impressive but non-threatening event. The combination is particularly effective for masking loud, irregular environmental noise: the thunder "explains" low-frequency rumbles that might otherwise register as concerning. There's a deep psychological comfort in thunderstorms for many people — the implicit message is "I'm warm and dry while nature does its thing" — a shelter response that quiets the vigilance systems.
Best for
5 Hours — when to use
Five hours covers an extended work shift or a full study day with breaks. This is practical coverage for a morning-to-lunch or afternoon-to-evening block. The sound loops seamlessly, so there's no jarring restart. At this duration, consider keeping volume lower (35-45 dB) - extended listening at higher volumes causes auditory fatigue even with pleasant sounds.
Thunderstorm Sounds — all durations
Thunderstorm Sounds variants
Also 5 hours
Why Softly
No ads. Ever.
No mid-sleep interruptions. No 3 AM ad breaks. Just sound.
Sleep timer with fade
Sound helps you fall asleep. Gradual fade lets your brain cycle through REM undisturbed.
Offline mode
No buffering. No WiFi needed. Download and listen anywhere.
Learn more
Frequently Asked Questions
What is thunderstorm sounds?
Combines broadband rain spectrum with low-frequency thunder. Particularly effective for masking loud, irregular environmental noise.
Is thunderstorm sounds good for sleep?
Yes — thunderstorm sounds rates 5/5 for sleep on Softly. Thunderstorms combine multiple masking elements in a single soundscape: the broadband spectrum of rain, the low-frequency impact of thunder, and the unpredictable-yet-patterned dynamic range that prevents auditory habituation fatigue. Distant thunder (not close) adds dramatic texture without the startle response — the brain processes it as an impressive but non-threatening event.
How long should I listen to thunderstorm sounds?
Five hours covers an extended work shift or a full study day with breaks. This is practical coverage for a morning-to-lunch or afternoon-to-evening block. The sound loops seamlessly, so there's no jarring restart. At this duration, consider keeping volume lower (35-45 dB) - extended listening at higher volumes causes auditory fatigue even with pleasant sounds.