Tinnitus is a real, brain-generated sound that a child hears without an external source. Children might describe it as ringing, buzzing, humming, or whooshing. Although it can feel like it is coming from the ears, tinnitus is generated by the brain—just like other internal sensory experiences.
This distinction matters. The sound itself is benign. What determines whether it becomes a problem is how the brain interprets and responds to it.
Tinnitus in children is far more common than most people realize.
Research shows that:
In other words, most children who notice tinnitus are not troubled by it (Rosing et al., 2016; Humphriss et al., 2016; Coelho et al., 2007).
One reason prevalence estimates vary widely is that children often do not report tinnitus unless specifically asked. When directly questioned in structured studies, rates increase significantly (Humphriss et al., 2016).
The key clinical takeaway is this:
The presence of tinnitus is common. Bothersome tinnitus is not.
Children frequently do not bring up tinnitus on their own. This can be because:
Because of this, clinicians should ask directly in simple terms:
Tinnitus becomes bothersome not because of the sound itself, but because of the child’s interpretation and nervous system response.
A child is more likely to struggle when:
The brain is constantly scanning for meaning. When it encounters a new internal sound, it asks:
Is this important? Is this a threat?
If the answer becomes “yes,” the brain:
This creates a self-reinforcing loop of attention and anxiety.
Tinnitus in children can occur with or without medical contributors. When present, common associations include:
It is important to separate:
A medical or audiologic evaluation is appropriate if tinnitus is:
In most pediatric cases, especially when tinnitus is bilateral and stable, findings are benign (Baguley et al., 2013).
Many children first notice tinnitus at night. This can unintentionally create a learned pattern:
Over time, the brain links bedtime cues (brushing teeth, lights off) with tinnitus and fear.
The brain learns: bedtime = tinnitus = threat
This is known as anticipatory tinnitus—where the expectation of the sound drives attention to it.
What helps:
Using calm, accurate language:
“This is a safe sound. My brain makes it sometimes. I don’t need to track it.”
Language shapes how the brain interprets the experience.
Helpful ways to explain tinnitus:
Less helpful approaches include:
The goal is simple:
Effective support focuses on the child’s response, not eliminating the sound.
1. Clear education
Accurate information reduces fear immediately.
2. Nervous system regulation
Helping the child feel calm reduces the intensity of the loop.
3. Attention flexibility
Encouraging natural shifts in attention without forcing distraction.
4. Sound environment (when needed)
Soft background sound can reduce contrast in quiet settings.
5. Parent and clinician modeling
Children take cues from adult reactions. Calm responses matter.
The prognosis for children with tinnitus is excellent.
When tinnitus is:
It typically:
Children are often especially capable of this shift when guided correctly.
The focus of care should not be on the sound, but on the child’s relationship to the sound.
Tinnitus is a benign, brain-generated sound.
Distress is driven by interpretation and nervous system activation.
When we change that relationship, the system settles—and the sound loses its importance.
References
Rosing SN, Schmidt JH, Wedderkopp N, Baguley DM. (2016).
Prevalence of tinnitus and hyperacusis in children and adolescents: a systematic review.
BMJ Open, 6(6): e010596.
Humphriss RL, Hall AJ, Baguley DM. (2016).
Prevalence and characteristics of spontaneous tinnitus in 11-year-old children.
International Journal of Audiology, 55(3): 142–148.
Coelho CB, Sanchez TG, Tyler RS. (2007).
Tinnitus in children and associated risk factors.
Progress in Brain Research, 166: 179–191.
Baguley DM, McFerran DJ, Hall DA. (2013).
Tinnitus.
The Lancet, 382(9904): 1600–1607.