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How to Find Your Tinnitus Frequency — A Step-by-Step Pitch Matching Guide (2026)

How to Find Your Tinnitus Frequency — A Step-by-Step Pitch Matching Guide (2026)

Quick Answer: Most tinnitus falls between 3,000–8,000 Hz, with the average around 4,000–6,000 Hz. You can identify your tinnitus frequency using a free browser-based tone generator — no app download needed. The process takes about 5–10 minutes and involves playing reference tones until one matches the pitch you hear in your ears.


Why Your Tinnitus Frequency Matters

I spent the first six months after my tinnitus started just trying to "ignore it." That didn't work. What actually changed everything was finding my exact tinnitus frequency — a high-pitched 5,800 Hz tone that I could barely describe to my audiologist until I matched it with a tone generator.

Knowing your tinnitus frequency isn't just academic curiosity. It directly affects which therapy approach will work best for you. Sound masking, notched audio therapy, and tinnitus retraining therapy (TRT) all depend on knowing your specific pitch. Without it, you're essentially guessing.

Here's why frequency matters for each therapy type:

  • Sound masking needs to cover or sit near your tinnitus frequency to be effective
  • Notched audio therapy removes a narrow band around your tinnitus frequency — if the notch is wrong, the therapy does nothing
  • TRT protocols use your frequency to set custom sound generators
  • Hearing aid programming can add tinnitus masking features tuned to your pitch

What Is Tinnitus Pitch Matching?

Pitch matching is exactly what it sounds like: you listen to a series of reference tones and identify which one sounds closest to the ringing, buzzing, or hissing in your ears. It's the same technique audiologists use in clinical settings, but you can do a reasonably accurate version at home using browser-based tools.

Types of Tinnitus Sounds

Before you start matching, it helps to categorize what you're hearing. In my experience and from reading hundreds of forum posts, most people describe their tinnitus as one of these:

Sound Type Typical Frequency Range Common Causes
High-pitched ringing 3,000–10,000 Hz Noise exposure, age-related hearing loss
Low-pitched humming 50–500 Hz Meniere's disease, TMJ disorders
Buzzing/clicking Variable Muscle spasms in the middle ear
Hissing (like steam) 4,000–8,000 Hz Ototoxic medications, acoustic trauma
Pulsing (heartbeat) N/A — vascular Blood vessel issues (see a doctor)

If your tinnitus pulses with your heartbeat, stop reading and see a doctor — pulsatile tinnitus can indicate a vascular condition that needs medical attention.

Step-by-Step: How to Find Your Tinnitus Frequency

Here's the exact process I used, which takes about 5–10 minutes in a quiet room with headphones.

Step 1: Get Ready

Find a quiet room. Put on over-ear headphones (earbuds work too, but over-ear gives better frequency accuracy). Set your volume to a comfortable, low-to-medium level — you should be able to hear the reference tones clearly without them being loud.

Step 2: Start with a Broad Sweep

Use a browser-based frequency test tool like AudioCleanAI's free tinnitus frequency test. It plays tones across the hearing spectrum and lets you narrow down your match without downloading anything.

Start at 1,000 Hz and slowly sweep upward. Pay attention to when the reference tone starts sounding "similar" to your tinnitus. Most people find their match somewhere between 3,000 and 8,000 Hz.

Step 3: Narrow It Down

Once you're in the right ballpark (say, around 5,000–6,000 Hz), start making smaller adjustments — 100 Hz at a time. Play each tone for 3–5 seconds, then pause and compare it to what you hear in your ears.

Pro tip: Close your eyes during this step. It sounds silly, but removing visual distraction makes it significantly easier to compare internal and external sounds.

Step 4: Confirm the Match

When you think you've found it, play the tone for 15–20 seconds. Does it "blend" with your tinnitus? If the external tone and your internal ringing seem to merge or cancel each other out slightly, you're very close.

Step 5: Check Both Ears

Tinnitus is often different in each ear. Test your left and right ear separately by covering one ear at a time. You might have 4,200 Hz in your left ear and 6,100 Hz in your right — this is normal and important for customized therapy.

Common Tinnitus Frequency Ranges

Based on clinical data and my own research across audiology studies, here's where most people's tinnitus falls:

Frequency Range Percentage of Sufferers Typical Sound
Below 500 Hz ~8% Low hum, rumble
500–2,000 Hz ~15% Low-to-mid tone
2,000–4,000 Hz ~25% Mid-range ringing
4,000–6,000 Hz ~30% High-pitched ringing (most common)
6,000–10,000 Hz ~18% Very high, piercing tone
Above 10,000 Hz ~4% Ultra-high, hard to match

The 4,000 Hz "notch" is so common that audiologists sometimes call it the "noise notch" — it's the frequency most damaged by loud noise exposure.

What to Do After You Find Your Frequency

Once you know your tinnitus pitch, here's how to put that information to work:

1. Set Up Personalized Sound Masking

Tools like AudioCleanAI's sound mixer let you layer masking sounds at or near your tinnitus frequency. A masker that's tuned to 5,800 Hz is dramatically more effective than generic white noise.

2. Try Notched Audio Therapy

Notched therapy works by removing a narrow band of sound centered on your tinnitus frequency. This stimulates your brain's auditory cortex to "rewire" around the phantom sound. The notch has to be precisely placed — even 200 Hz off can reduce effectiveness.

3. Share the Data with Your Audiologist

Write down your matched frequency (both ears if different) and bring it to your next appointment. It saves clinical testing time and helps your audiologist program hearing aids or sound generators more accurately.

4. Track Changes Over Time

Your tinnitus frequency can shift over weeks and months. I recommend re-testing every 2–4 weeks and logging the results with a tinnitus tracker. A downward shift in frequency or a reduction in perceived loudness are both positive signs of habituation.

Tips for Accurate Pitch Matching

  • Test in the morning — tinnitus is often less intense after sleep, making comparison easier
  • Avoid caffeine beforehand — caffeine can temporarily increase tinnitus loudness
  • Don't test during a spike — if your tinnitus is louder than usual, wait for a normal day
  • Use the same headphones each time — consistency matters for tracking changes
  • Keep volume low — you're matching pitch, not loudness; high volume can throw off your perception
  • Take breaks — if you've been testing for more than 10 minutes, stop and come back later

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I find my tinnitus frequency without special equipment?

Yes. A browser-based tone generator with standard headphones is sufficient for most people. You don't need clinical audiometry equipment for a reasonable estimate. The key is a quiet environment and patience during the matching process.

What if my tinnitus has multiple frequencies?

This is common — about 30% of tinnitus sufferers report hearing more than one pitch. Try to match the dominant (loudest) frequency first, then note any secondary tones. Some tools, including AudioCleanAI's frequency test, let you identify multiple pitches.

Is tinnitus pitch matching the same as an audiogram?

No. An audiogram tests your hearing thresholds across frequencies (how quiet a sound can be before you can't hear it). Pitch matching identifies the frequency of your phantom sound. They're complementary tests — an audiogram shows hearing damage patterns, while pitch matching guides tinnitus therapy.

How accurate is DIY pitch matching compared to clinical testing?

Studies show that self-administered pitch matching is typically accurate within ±250 Hz of clinical results. For sound masking and notched therapy purposes, this is close enough to be effective. Clinical testing may be more precise, but the practical difference is minimal.

My tinnitus changes pitch throughout the day — is this normal?

Yes. Tinnitus pitch can fluctuate based on stress levels, fatigue, caffeine intake, jaw position, and ambient noise. Try to identify your "baseline" frequency — the pitch you hear most often during normal, calm conditions.

Can high-frequency tinnitus (above 8,000 Hz) be matched?

It's harder but possible. Most consumer headphones reproduce frequencies up to 16,000–20,000 Hz. If your tinnitus is very high-pitched and you can't find a match with standard tools, your audiologist can use extended high-frequency audiometry equipment.

Should I match my tinnitus frequency before starting sound therapy?

Ideally, yes. Knowing your frequency allows you to customize masking sounds and notched therapy for maximum effectiveness. Starting sound therapy without frequency matching is like taking medication without knowing the right dose — it might help, but probably not optimally.


This article is for informational and wellness purposes only and does not replace professional medical advice. If your tinnitus is accompanied by sudden hearing loss, dizziness, or one-sided symptoms, consult a healthcare professional.

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