Sound Test Online – Check Speakers & Headphones

3 min read Original article ↗

Check if your headphones or speakers are properly connected and working with this test. Tap the circle to play. Tap a side to switch ears.

Frequency Test

Sweep from 20 Hz to 20 kHz. Drag the slider, tap a band, then press play to hear that exact frequency.

Soundstage Test

An 880 Hz tone moves left-to-right around your head. Auto pan is hands-free; manual lets you place it.

All tools

Each tool has its own dedicated page with full controls. Pick one to dive in.

Frequency Test

20 Hz to 20 kHz, with a sweep.

Speaker Test

L/R, polarity, full sweep.

Mic Test

Record. Play back. Download.

Decibel Meter

Live SPL with peak history.

Webcam Test

HD preview, FPS, snapshot.

Pitch Detector

Note, frequency, cents.

Online Tone Generator

Sine, square, triangle, noise.

Bass Test

Find your low-end limit.

Audio Latency Test

Tap to the beat. We measure.

Touch Screen Test

Multi-touch, draw, grid.

Mouse Test

Buttons, wheel, polling, CPS.

Before you start

Four quick habits that make audio testing more accurate and easier on your ears.

  1. 01

    Start at 50%.

    Comfortable middle. Turn up slowly.

  2. 02

    Use real headphones.

    A quiet room helps too.

  3. 03

    Check both ears.

    If one fades, swap the cable side.

  4. 04

    Take small breaks.

    Fresh ears spot problems faster.

This sound test is the fastest way to check that your headphones, earbuds, or speakers are working — left, right, and stereo together — without installing anything. Tap the centre to play in both ears, the L badge for left only, the R badge for right only. If a side is silent or noticeably quieter, you've already found a problem.

What the sound test checks

  • Both channels output — left and right drivers actually produce sound.
  • Channel balance — one side dropping out points to a cable, jack, or worn driver.
  • Channel mix-up — the swap toggle catches L/R reversed in software or wiring.
  • Frequency response — the 20 Hz – 20 kHz slider exposes drop-outs and distortion.

How to use this sound test

  1. Put on your headphones or position yourself between your speakers.
  2. Set system volume to 30–50 % first — sweeps can get loud quickly.
  3. Play both channels, then L only, then R only, listening for level differences.
  4. Drag the frequency slider from low to high and listen for any drop-outs or rattle.

Frequently asked questions

Why is one side quieter than the other?

In order of likelihood: dirt or wax in the earbud, a partly unplugged jack, an off-centre system balance slider, a frayed cable, or a dying driver. Try the same headphones on a different device — if the imbalance follows them, the headphones are at fault.

Does the sound test work with Bluetooth headphones?

Yes. Pair them, set them as the system output, and run the test. Bluetooth adds about 100–250 ms of latency and slight compression, but neither affects a "does it work" check.

I can't hear above 14 kHz — is my gear broken?

Probably not. Hearing rolls off in the top octave with age, starting in your twenties. Most adults can't hear 18 kHz reliably even on new equipment.

Is anything recorded or uploaded?

No. The sound test runs entirely in your browser using the Web Audio API. Nothing leaves your device.