🌐 EN

πŸ”Š Speaker Test

Check left/right channels and frequency response to make sure your speakers or earbuds are working.

⚠️ Lower your device volume before starting. Sudden loud tones or high frequencies can be unpleasant or harmful to your hearing, especially with earbuds.

Channel test

Frequency sweep

Frequency 440 Hz

Press play to hear the test tone.

Hardware tests
GUIDE

Learn more

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1. Why test your speakers?

New earbuds, a headset, or laptop/monitor speakers can sometimes have swapped left/right channels or a dead side straight out of the box. This tool generates clean test tones in the browser to play the left, right, and both channels separately, and sweeps the full 20Hz-20kHz range so you can check the audible frequency range.

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2. How to use the channel test

Pressing "Left," "Right," or "Both" plays a 440Hz reference tone on just that channel. With earbuds in, press each button and confirm the sound actually comes from the matching ear. If pressing "Left" plays sound on your right side, the channels are swapped, or your earbuds' L/R marking is on the wrong ear.

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3. Checking response with the frequency sweep

Moving the slider from 20Hz (lowest bass) to 20,000Hz (highest treble) plays a pure tone at that frequency in real time. Human hearing varies a lot between people, and it's completely normal for high frequencies (typically above 15kHz) to become harder to hear with age. If a speaker crackles or cuts out at low frequencies, that can indicate a damaged driver.

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4. Troubleshooting odd sound

If only one side plays sound, check: (1) the earbud jack is fully inserted, (2) your OS sound settings' output balance is centered, (3) a Bluetooth earbud isn't connected in mono call mode. If sound only distorts at specific frequencies, lower the volume and retest β€” if it persists, it may point to a hardware issue.

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5. Hearing safety while testing

During a frequency sweep, high tones (above 15kHz) or high volume can sound much sharper and louder than expected. Always start at a low volume and increase it gradually. Be especially mindful if children or pets are nearby β€” very high frequencies that feel mild to adult ears can still be uncomfortable for them.

Frequently asked questions

I pressed Left but the sound comes from the right.
Your speakers or earbuds likely have swapped left/right channels. Check the L/R marking on your earbuds, or check the channel balance in your OS sound settings.
I can't hear anything near 20kHz.
That can be perfectly normal β€” most people lose sensitivity to high frequencies (typically 15-20kHz) as they age; it's a common part of natural hearing change.
The tone was much louder than I expected.
Always start testing at low volume and increase gradually. Please read the volume warning at the top of the page first.
Can this test accurately diagnose a broken speaker?
This is a quick sanity check for swapped channels or an inaudible frequency range β€” it's not a substitute for proper audio measurement equipment for a precise diagnosis.