By Dr. Jennifer Gans
One of the biggest gaps in how we talk about tinnitus is this:
👉 We are not talking enough about hyperacusis.
And we need to.
Because a significant portion of people who are struggling with tinnitus are not just dealing with sound…
👉 they are dealing with sound sensitivity
Research and clinical observation consistently suggest that a large percentage—often cited around 60%—of people with bothersome tinnitus also experience some form of hyperacusis.
That is not a small subgroup.
That is the majority.
And if we ignore it, we misunderstand the entire experience.
Hyperacusis is often described as:
“sound sensitivity”
“normal sounds feel too loud”
“everyday noises feel overwhelming or even painful”
But that description is incomplete.
Hyperacusis is not just about loudness.
👉 It is about how the brain is interpreting sound.
Just like tinnitus.
Tinnitus and hyperacusis are not separate problems.
They are two expressions of the same underlying process:
👉 a brain that has become over-vigilant and overprotective
In tinnitus:
the brain generates a sound
then flags it as important
In hyperacusis:
the brain receives normal sound
and amplifies its importance and intensity
In both cases:
👉 the issue is not the signal
👉 it is the brain’s relationship to the signal
Hyperacusis adds another layer of difficulty because it changes how a person moves through the world.
Now it’s not just:
“I hear something internally”
It becomes:
“The outside world doesn’t feel safe anymore”
People begin to:
This creates a powerful loop:
Here is where many people get unintentionally stuck:
They try to protect themselves from sound.
And again—this makes sense.
But the brain learns something very quickly:
👉 “Sound is dangerous.”
And once the brain learns that:
it turns up the gain
it becomes more reactive
it becomes faster to trigger
So the very thing meant to help…
👉 can reinforce the problem
This is where many traditional approaches fall short.
If we only focus on:
reducing tinnitus
masking sound
avoiding triggers
We miss the larger picture.
Because:
👉 you cannot solve hyperacusis by controlling sound alone
Just like:
👉 you cannot solve tinnitus by eliminating the sound
Hyperacusis is a nervous system issue.
It reflects:
heightened arousal
increased threat detection
reduced filtering
a system that is “turned up too high”
So the work becomes:
👉 regulating the system—not eliminating sound
The shift is not:
❌ “Sound is too loud”
❌ “I need to avoid sound”
The shift is:
👉 “My brain is reacting strongly to sound”
👉 “This reaction can change”
This is critical.
Because it moves the person from:
helpless → empowered
reactive → responsive
Tinnitus + Hyperacusis Together
When both are present, they reinforce each other:
tinnitus draws attention inward
hyperacusis creates fear outward
So the person feels trapped:
👉 internally and externally
This is why addressing both together is essential.
What Actually Helps
The path forward is not force.
It is not:
pushing through
overwhelming the system
ignoring distress
And it is also not:
complete avoidance
overprotection
shrinking life
It is a middle path:
1. Education
Understanding that:
nothing is damaged
the system is overreactive, not broken
2. Nervous System Regulation
breathing
mindfulness
reducing baseline arousal
3. Gradual Re-engagement with Sound
not flooding
not avoidance
but gentle, consistent exposure
4. Changing the Internal Dialogue
From:
“This is too much”
To:
“This is uncomfortable, but I am safe”
Why This Fits the Larger Model
This is why your work is so important.
Because hyperacusis makes it undeniable:
👉 this is not about sound
This is about:
perception
interpretation
nervous system balance
The exact same principles apply:
tinnitus
hyperacusis
floaters
intrusive sensations
Final Truth
Hyperacusis is not a sign that something is wrong with the world.
👉 It is a sign that the brain is trying too hard to protect you.
And just like tinnitus:
👉 it can change
Not by controlling sound.
But by changing:
the system
the meaning
the response