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Why Can I Hear My Neighbors Through the Wall?

Hearing TV, conversations, or music from next door? Your wall isn't blocking enough sound — here's why and what to do about it.

Does This Sound Like Your Problem?

Check Your Wall's Performance

Enter your wall construction to see its STC rating and how much sound it actually blocks.

Use STC Estimator

Why Sound Gets Through Walls

Sound travels through walls in several ways:

The measure of how well a wall blocks airborne sound is called STC (Sound Transmission Class). Higher STC = better blocking.

STC 25-30
Poor
Normal speech easily understood
STC 35-40
Fair
Loud speech audible, not understood
STC 45-50
Good
Loud speech barely heard
STC 55+
Excellent
Most sounds inaudible

Common Wall Types and Their STC

The weak link matters most. Your wall might be STC 50, but if there's an unsealed outlet box, the effective STC could be 30. Sound finds the easiest path.

How to Improve Your Wall

1. Seal All Gaps

Caulk around outlets, switches, baseboards, and any penetrations. Use acoustic putty pads behind outlet boxes. This alone can add 5-10 STC points.

2. Add Mass

Another layer of drywall (5/8" is better than 1/2"), or better yet, use mass-loaded vinyl between layers. More mass = more blocking.

3. Decouple the Layers

Resilient channels or sound isolation clips between the studs and drywall break the vibration path. This is the biggest single improvement.

4. Add Cavity Insulation

If the wall cavity is empty, adding fiberglass or rockwool insulation improves STC by 4-6 points. Denser insulation is slightly better.

Acoustic panels won't help. Those foam or fabric panels absorb sound inside your room (reducing echo) but do nothing to block sound transmission through walls. Soundproofing requires mass, decoupling, and sealing.

What About Bass?

Low frequencies are the hardest to block. Standard STC testing doesn't even include frequencies below 125 Hz, so a wall with good STC can still let bass through.

For bass, you need:

If bass is your main problem, look for walls with good OITC (Outdoor-Indoor Transmission Class) ratings, which better account for low frequencies.

How Good Is Your Wall?

Enter your wall construction and see how it compares to building codes and recommended values.

Estimate Your STC — Free

When to Get Professional Help

Consider consulting an acoustical professional if:

Related Resources

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