By Dr. Jennifer Gans
Sound therapy is one of the most commonly recommended tools for tinnitus. When used appropriately, it can be very helpful. When misunderstood, it can unintentionally keep the brain focused on the tinnitus signal.
The difference lies not in the sound itself, but in how the brain is using it.
The role of sound therapy is not to eliminate tinnitus.
It is to:
In this way, sound acts as a background support, not a solution to be managed or perfected.
Sound therapy begins to work against you when it becomes focused on the tinnitus itself.
This can happen when someone starts:
These behaviors are completely understandable. They come from a desire to gain control.
But they also send a message to the brain:
“This sound is important. Keep paying attention.”
At that point, sound therapy shifts from a supportive tool into another form of monitoring and measurement.
The brain follows attention.
The more you direct attention toward tinnitus—even indirectly through sound therapy—the more the brain prioritizes it.
This creates a subtle loop:
The issue is not the sound therapy itself. The issue is how it is being used by the brain.
Sound therapy works best when it is simple, steady, and not the focus of attention.
1. Use Sound as Background, Not as a Tool to Fix Tinnitus
Choose sound that is neutral and calming:
Let it be present in the environment without actively engaging with it.
2. Set It and Leave It
Once you choose a sound, avoid adjusting it repeatedly.
There is no “perfect level” to find.
Constant adjustments keep the brain in a problem-solving and monitoring mode.
3. Do Not Check the Tinnitus
Try not to use the sound to test:
Each time you check, you reinforce the brain’s habit of tracking the tinnitus signal.
4. Pair Sound with Relaxation, Not Control
Use sound in moments that support regulation:
Let sound be associated with calm and safety, not effort and control.
5. Allow Tinnitus to Be There
This is one of the most important shifts.
Sound therapy is not meant to erase tinnitus. It is meant to reduce the brain’s need to react to it.
When tinnitus is allowed to be present without constant monitoring, the brain begins to learn:
“This is not important.”
Many people approach sound therapy with the goal of covering or eliminating tinnitus.
This often leads to frustration.
The more helpful goal is:
to reduce the brain’s attention to the sound.
When attention softens, tinnitus naturally becomes less intrusive—even if it is still present.
Instead of asking:
“How do I get rid of this sound?”
Try shifting toward:
“How can I create an environment where my brain feels safe enough to stop focusing on it?”
Sound therapy can support that shift—but only when it is used to support the nervous system, not to monitor the tinnitus.
Sound therapy works best when it moves from:
When used in this way, sound becomes a gentle aid in helping the brain deprioritize tinnitus.
Sound does not reduce tinnitus by competing with it.
Sound helps when it allows the brain to relax, feel safe, and shift attention away from the signal.
And when the brain no longer needs to monitor tinnitus, the experience often becomes quieter—not because the sound has changed, but because attention has.