How Old Are Your Ears?
Discover your hearing age in under 2 minutes with our science-backed frequency test.
Why Test Your Hearing Age?
Your "Hearing Age" compares your hearing to the average person. For example, a high-pitched tone at 17,400 Hz is usually clear to teenagers but silent to adults over 25.
This test helps you understand if your hearing stops at 12,000 Hz, 15,000 Hz, or beyond – it could be a wake-up call to protect your hearing now before you lose sensitivity of a typical 40-year-old; it's a wake-up call to protect the hearing you have left.
What is an Audiogram?
Think of an audiogram as a map of your hearing. It plots the softest sounds you can hear across different frequencies. While clinical tests cover speech sounds, this online test focuses on the first part of your hearing to fade: it's the high-frequency edge. It's the "canary in the coal mine" for your hearing health.
Why High Frequencies Fade First
Tiny hair cells in your inner ear capture sound. The ones tuned to high pitches are fragile and at the entrance of the ear, making them the first to get damaged by aging (presbycusis) or noise exposure. The natural, gradual decline of high-frequency hearing over time from typical daily noise levels (aging) can start in your teens—but stays accelerated by loud concerts, earbuds at max volume, or workplace noise.
Unlock Your Full Potential
Every ear is unique. Complete the hearing test to unlock your customized EQ profile that matches your exact hearing age, restoring the clarity and brilliance you might be missing.
Personalized Audio Calibration
Imagine listening to music exactly as it was intended to be heard. Our calibration tool uses your test results to compensate for high-frequency attenuation.
- Restore missing high-end detail
- Custom EQ profile for your hearing age
- Enhanced clarity for speech and music
Protecting Your Hearing
Hearing loss is permanent. Hair cells do not grow back. Prevention is your only defense.
Follow the 60/60 Rule
Listen to music at no more than 60% volume for no more than 60 minutes at a time.
Wear Earplugs
High-fidelity earplugs lower the volume at concerts without muffling the sound.
Noise Exposure
Loud concerts, earbuds at max volume, or workplace noise can cause permanent damage. When these cells break, speech sounds start to blur, and you struggle to understand the words, especially in noisy rooms.
Frequently Asked Questions
Built by engineers using standard digital signal processing protocols.
* This content is for educational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional medical advice or a clinical audiogram by a licensed audiologist.