Speaker Test Online
Check your left and right channels, stereo balance, volume, and clarity in your browser, and find out what the result actually means.
Use this Speaker Test before and after cleaning so you know whether the problem is dust, water, call speaker, Bluetooth, volume, or hardware.
Start low, raise slowly. Remove earbuds before loud tests. Stop any test that feels harsh, painful, or uncomfortable.
Checks the left side, the right side, balance, and a gentle frequency sweep so you can hear the result.
Set the volume high but comfortable, then listen to each side.
Quick water check. Was it more than a light splash, for example pool water, salt water, a sugary drink, or full submersion?
Channel checks
You should hear sound from each side clearly. If one side is faint or distorted, that side needs attention.
Compare before and after
Listen before a cleaning cycle and again after, so you can compare.
This is a sound check, not a medical hearing test.
Ready when you are. Press play to start a short cycle.
Before you start
- Check left side
- Check right side
- Try sweep briefly
Cycle complete. Test your speaker now.
Did the sound improve?
- Turn off Bluetooth so sound plays from the phone.
- Raise the media volume to high but comfortable.
- Turn off silent mode or do not disturb.
- Tap play again, browsers need one tap to start audio.
- Try another browser, for example Chrome or Safari.
- Remove the case or any blockage near the speaker grille.
- No app
- No login
- No microphone
- No data collected
Your browser cannot play this tone. Try a current version of Chrome, Safari, Firefox, or Edge.
Free online speaker test
Maybe your sound seems off and you cannot name why. Maybe one side feels quiet, calls sound faint, or you just cleaned your speaker and want proof it worked. This free Speaker Test plays clean reference sounds through each channel so you can hear exactly what your speaker can and cannot do right now.
No app, no login, no microphone access, and nothing is recorded, because this test plays sound out and listens to nothing.
Use this Speaker Test when you need a quick, private way to compare channels, volume, and clarity before guessing what is wrong.
Quick speaker test checklist
- Start at low volume and raise it slowly.
- Testing the phone speaker? Turn Bluetooth off first.
- Wearing earbuds? Take them out before any loud test or sweep.
- Test before cleaning, then again after, and compare.
- Stop if the test feels harsh, painful, or uncomfortable.
This checks your speaker, not your ears. It is not a hearing test.
Stop guessing
Test your speaker before you guess
Most people troubleshoot sound backwards. They clean, restart, fiddle with settings, and only then find out what the problem actually was. Testing first flips that.
Two minutes with the tool above tells you whether the speaker is healthy, which side is weak, whether the problem is blockage or hardware, and whether the real culprit was ever the speaker at all.
The test runs entirely in your browser. Nothing to install, no account, and no microphone access, because a Speaker Test only plays sound out. It never listens, never records, and never sends anything anywhere. That also means your results stay yours: you listen, you judge, you act.
And it is the before-and-after instrument for this whole site. Run it once before any cleaning, once after, and you replace guessing with hearing. The difference between thinking it helped and hearing the left channel return is this page.
Pick the right one
First, choose what you want to check
Different worries need different tests, and picking the right one takes ten seconds.
Run the quick test on both speakers and listen for anything dull, harsh, or lopsided.
Run the left and right tests separately to compare the two sides.
Your earpiece is the suspect. The both-speakers test on a stereo phone lets you hear it, since the earpiece doubles as the second channel on most modern phones. The call speaker cleaner handles it.
The frequency sweep finds the pitch where it happens, which says a lot about the cause.
The volume and distortion check separates a settings problem from a blocked grille.
Do not panic yet. Bluetooth steals more sound than hardware failure ever does, and the settings checks catch it.
Headphones, earbuds, Bluetooth speakers, laptops, and tablets all work with this test too, each with one safety note covered in the device section.
Which Speaker Test should you run?
| What you notice | Best test | What to listen for | Next step |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sound is unclear | Quick test, both speakers | Dullness, harshness, missing detail | Result guide below |
| One side sounds quiet | Left then right test | Volume difference between sides | Balance section |
| Phone calls are faint | Both speakers on a stereo phone | Weak top speaker | Call speaker cleaner |
| Music is low | Volume and distortion check | Low output at high volume | Settings, then dust check |
| Speaker crackles | Frequency sweep | Crackle at specific pitches | Result guide, water history |
| Speaker buzzes at one pitch | Frequency sweep | Buzz or rattle at one tone | Result guide below |
| No sound plays | Quick test with Bluetooth off | Silence | Settings section first |
| After water cleaning | Full test | Sound returns vs before | Compare, repeat if improving |
| After dust cleaning | Full test | High notes returning | Compare, dry longer if needed |
Reference testing
Use the Speaker Test tool
The suite plays clean, known sounds, tones, sweeps, and channel signals, so anything wrong you hear belongs to your speaker, not to a song’s mix or a video’s recording. When the input is known and clean, the output tells the truth.
Before you press start
- Set the volume low. Every test starts quiet on purpose, and you raise it slowly to a comfortable level.
- Decide what you are testing. For the phone’s own speaker, switch Bluetooth off so nothing hijacks the audio.
- For headphones or earbuds, keep the volume modest and skip nothing in the safety notes.
- Take the phone out of its case if you are chasing a muffled sound, because cases muffle speakers convincingly.
While the test is playing
- Listen for character, not just presence. A healthy speaker sounds even and clean across the test.
- Trouble announces itself as dullness, one-sided volume, crackle at certain pitches, buzz that comes and goes as the sweep climbs, or distortion that grows with volume.
- Note what you hear and roughly when in the test you hear it.
- If anything feels harsh or uncomfortable, stop, lower the volume, and resume. Discomfort is never part of a correct test.
After the test finishes
- Match what you heard against the result guide further down this page. Clear and even means done.
- Anything else maps to a next step: a setting, a cleaning mode, drying time, or a technician.
- If you came here mid-cleaning, run the same test again after the cleaning cycle and compare like with like, same volume, same room, same test.
- Your ears are better comparison instruments than people give them credit for, as long as both samples are minutes apart.
The Speaker Test flow
Both channels alive?
Left and right speaker test
The left right Speaker Test answers the simplest big question in audio: are both channels alive, and are they where they should be?
Press Test Left and sound should come from the left side only. Press Test Right for the right side only. On headphones and earbuds this is unmistakable, since each ear is its own sealed channel. On laptops the speakers sit left and right of the keyboard. On tablets it depends on how you hold them, so test in the orientation you actually use.
Phones deserve one honest paragraph nobody else writes. A modern stereo phone uses its bottom loudspeaker as one channel and its earpiece as the other, and it maps left and right based on orientation, which mostly means landscape, the way you hold it for video. In portrait, both channels still play, just from top and bottom rather than left and right. And many budget phones are mono by design: one speaker, one channel, so a left right difference physically cannot exist on them, and a failed stereo test on a mono phone is not a failure at all. Find out which you have by playing the both-channels test and listening to the top slot: if the earpiece sings along, you have stereo.
If one side is genuinely silent on a device that should have two, work the order
- Balance settings first
- Mono audio setting second
- The connection or pairing third
- Only then suspect the speaker itself
Balance is about the middle. With both channels playing the same signal, the sound should seem centered, floating between the speakers rather than leaning toward one. If your stereo image pulls left or right, something is unbalanced, and it is usually not the hardware.
The usual suspects, in order of likelihood
Only after those checks does a leaning stereo image suggest a weakening speaker, and even then, a blocked grille on one side is more likely than a dying driver. The Speaker Cleaner covers the cleaning side.
The most revealing test
Frequency sweep test
The frequency sweep glides from low tones through mids to high tones, and it is the most revealing test in the suite, as long as you read it fairly.
Read it fairly means knowing what a small speaker can do. Phone and laptop speakers are physically tiny, and deep bass needs moving air that tiny drivers cannot move. So the bottom of the sweep will sound quiet or nearly absent on every phone ever made, and that is physics, not damage. The same speaker should then come alive through the mids, where voices live, and stay clean into the highs, where detail and sparkle live.
What you are listening for is not whether every pitch plays loud. You are listening for evenness and cleanliness across the range the speaker does cover.
May indicate something loose vibrating in sympathy: a particle on the mesh, a loose grille, even the phone resting against a hard table.
May indicate dust on the speaker mesh, since blockage steals treble first. The Speaker Dust Cleaner targets that.
Especially with any water in the phone’s recent past, may indicate moisture or a stressed diaphragm, and deserves drying time before any louder testing. See Water Eject and the remove water from speaker guide.
One boundary stays bright and clear: this sweep tests your speaker’s output, not your hearing. High tones fading at the top of a sweep can mean the speaker rolls off, the room swallowed it, or human ears simply vary, and this page will not pretend to untangle that. No browser tone is a medical hearing assessment, and anyone worried about their hearing deserves a real audiologist, not a sweep button. For more, see the official hearing-test guidance from NIDCD.
It works, but sounds bad
Volume and distortion test
This test answers the complaint behind most searches that land here: everything works, but it sounds bad.
Run the volume check and listen at three levels, low, middle, and high. A healthy speaker scales smoothly: louder, but the same character. Trouble shows up as character change.
Points at a blocked path: dust on the mesh, a case lip, a screen protector edge, because blockage steals clarity equally at all volumes.
Buzzing, rattling, or distortion as volume climbs may indicate the speaker diaphragm is being pushed past what it can currently do, which happens with debris sitting on it, with moisture still inside, and with genuine hardware wear.
Weak bass on a phone is normal, as the sweep section explains. Weak everything is not, and the difference between this phone was always this quiet and this phone got quiet is the whole diagnosis. If it got quiet slowly over weeks, dust is the lead suspect, and the Speaker Dust Cleaner fits. If it got quiet after an event, the event is the suspect, and water events have their own pages and their own rules.
Sound to action
What your speaker test result means
This is the section the desktop test tools never write: the translation from sound to action.
Your speaker is healthy, and whatever bothered you lives elsewhere, in an app, a file, a connection, or a memory of better sound. Enjoy the good news.
A blocked path. Case off, grille inspected in light, then the dust route if the phone stayed dry, or the water route if it did not.
After the settings checks from the balance section, this means one channel’s path is blocked or one driver is struggling. On a phone, a weak top channel is an earpiece problem with its own page.
With clean sound below it, this may indicate something loose or resting against the phone, or early diaphragm stress. Test once more with the phone in hand rather than on a table before concluding anything.
Stop testing loud, let the phone dry for hours, and test again gently later. Crackle that survives a full dry deserves a technician.
The earpiece signature, and the call speaker page owns it. No sound at all, after Bluetooth and silent mode are ruled out, is the one result where hardware moves to the front of the line, and a technician can confirm what no browser tone can.
Test result to next action
| Test result | Likely meaning | Best next page |
|---|---|---|
| Sound is clear | Speaker is healthy | None needed, enjoy it |
| Sound is muffled | Blocked grille, dust or case | Speaker Dust Cleaner |
| Left side is weak | Balance setting or blocked grille | Settings, then dust page |
| Right side is weak | Same as left, mirrored | Settings, then dust page |
| Both sides are low | Volume settings or even blockage | Settings section, then cleaning |
| Buzzing at high volume | Loose contact or diaphragm stress | Retest in hand, then technician |
| Crackling after water | Moisture inside | Remove Water from Speaker |
| Calls are faint | Earpiece blockage | Call Speaker Cleaner |
| People cannot hear you | Microphone, not speaker | Mic cleaner, future page |
| No sound at all | Routing, settings, or hardware | Settings, then technician |
Proof, not mood
Test before and after cleaning
Every cleaning page on this site ends with the same advice: test it. This page is where that advice points, and the workflow takes one minute on each side.
Run the quick test and note what you hear, the dull highs, the weak side, the crackle. Without a baseline, did the cleaning work becomes a mood instead of an answer.
Water Eject for splashes, Speaker Dust Cleaner for the slow fade, Call Speaker Cleaner for faint calls, or the full set on the Fix My Speaker home page.
Run the same Speaker Test at the same volume and compare against your note.
Clearer highs after a dust cycle means it is working and one more cycle may help. No change after two or three honest cycles means the blockage is past what sound moves, and you saved yourself an afternoon. Crackle that remains after water work means more drying time before anything else.
The test does not flatter and does not nag. It just tells you, which is the entire point.
Often not the hardware
Is it a speaker problem or a settings problem?
Half of all broken speakers are settings, and every item on this list has fooled careful people.
No browser tone can confirm hardware failure. A Speaker Test narrows the cause and rules out the easy explanations, but only a technician confirms hardware. For cleaning before that visit, the Speaker Cleaner covers every mode.
Runs anywhere a browser runs
Phone, laptop, tablet, Bluetooth, headphones, and earbuds
The Speaker Test suite runs anywhere a browser runs. The reading of results changes slightly per device.
iPhone speaker test
Modern iPhones are stereo: bottom loudspeaker plus earpiece as the second channel, mapped left and right in landscape. Test in landscape for a true channel check, and listen to the top slot during the both-speakers test, because a weak earpiece channel dulls videos and games, not just calls.
Check the accessibility balance slider and mono audio setting before blaming hardware. The volume-limit setting under sound settings can also quietly cap output. For cleaning steps after a failed test, the iPhone speaker cleaner page continues from here.
Android speaker test
Android spans everything from mono budget phones to quad-speaker tablets. First learn what you own: play the both-channels test and listen to the top slot. Stereo models behave like iPhones, landscape for channel mapping, earpiece as second channel. Mono models play one channel by design and cannot fail a balance test honestly.
Android skins add their own audio layers, Dolby modes, equalizers, adaptive sound, and any of them can be the problem the test reveals, so retest with enhancements off before judging the speaker. The Android speaker cleaner page picks up from a failed test with brand-specific cleaning notes.
Laptop and tablet speaker test
Laptops are where the left right test earns its keep, since balance drift and single-side failure are the classic laptop complaints, and desk dust settles into upward-facing grilles year after year.
Tablets vary too much for one rule: test in your usual orientation, and on four-speaker tablets run the sweep in both orientations to catch a single lazy driver. For both, muffled results deserve a look at the grilles with a soft dry brush before any deeper worry.
Headphones, earbuds, AirPods, and Bluetooth speaker test
Headphones and earbuds give perfect channel separation, which makes them ideal for balance testing. Test one earbud at a time held near, not in, your ear if you suspect a weak side. Battery levels matter too, since a low-battery earbud can play quieter before it dies. Bluetooth speakers test like any speaker, with one extra suspect: the connection itself. Stuttering or dropouts during the test are radio problems, not driver problems, and moving closer answers that in seconds.
The test names it, these pages fix it
When the test points to water, dust, call speaker, or mic problems
Matching symptom to page is the last step of every Speaker Test.
Crackle, sudden muffling, or anything with a splash in the story is water work: the water eject tool for the fast cycle, and the remove water from speaker guide for the full safe path.
Slow fading, dull highs, and visible lint are dust work, and the speaker dust cleaner pairs its tone with the safe brush routine.
A weak top channel and faint calls belong to the call speaker cleaner, the page built for the earpiece.
If your real complaint is that other people cannot hear you, the test you needed was never on this page, because that is the microphone, an input, and a dedicated mic page will handle it once it is live.
After settings are cleared, no sound anywhere is technician territory, and going while the device still half-works keeps that visit short. For general maintenance and all modes in one place, the speaker cleaner page rounds out the set.
What this test cannot do, stated plainly
A test that oversold itself would be worse than no test, so here are the edges.
When results stay bad after the settings checks, the cleaning routes, and honest retests, persistent faults belong to a repair shop. Arriving there with your test results, which side, which volume, which pitch, makes you the easiest customer of their day.
India: Hindi and Hinglish
स्पीकर टेस्ट: हिंदी और हिंग्लिश में (Speaker test in Hindi and Hinglish)
बहुत से लोग खोजते हैं: speaker test kaise kare, या phone speaker test kaise kare. जवाब ऊपर दिया गया टूल है, और तरीका बिल्कुल आसान है।
Mobile sound check kaise kare: volume kam rakhein, Bluetooth band karein, aur Start Speaker Test dabayein. Left right speaker test kaise kare: Test Left aur Test Right button alag alag dabayein aur sunein ki awaaz kis taraf se aa rahi hai. Yeh speaker check karne wala tool free hai, koi app nahi, koi login nahi, aur microphone ki permission kabhi nahi maangta.
जो लोग स्पीकर टेस्ट, फोन स्पीकर टेस्ट या आवाज़ चेक कैसे करें खोज रहे हैं, उनके लिए यही तरीका है। एक जरूरी बात: earbuds कान में लगाकर तेज़ आवाज़ का test कभी न चलाएं, और यह hearing test नहीं है, यह सिर्फ speaker की जांच है।
पूरी जानकारी हिंदी में हमारे Hindi speaker guide पर मिलेगी।
Everything in one place
Related tools
Once the Speaker Test names your problem, here is where to go next.
Decision library
Speaker test features
Every tool in the Speaker Test suite, what it checks, and when to reach for it.
| Feature | What it checks | Best for |
|---|---|---|
| Quick speaker test | Overall output and clarity | First check, before and after cleaning |
| Left channel test | Left side output | One quiet side, headphones, laptops |
| Right channel test | Right side output | Same, mirrored |
| Both speakers test | Combined output and the earpiece channel | Stereo phones, general health |
| Stereo balance test | Centered image between channels | Lopsided sound, settings drift |
| Frequency sweep | Evenness across low, mid, and high tones | Buzzing, rattling, dull highs |
| Volume check | Output scaling across levels | Low volume complaints |
| Distortion check | Clean sound at higher volume | Crackling and breakup |
| Before and after cleaning test | Comparison against your baseline | Proving a cleaning worked |
Reading results per device
Device testing notes
The same Speaker Test runs everywhere, but each device has one thing to check and one safety note.
| Device | What to check | Safety note |
|---|---|---|
| iPhone | Stereo pair in landscape, balance slider, volume limit | Start low, case off for muffle checks |
| Android | Mono or stereo first, enhancements off | Retest without equalizers |
| Samsung | Stereo flagships, mono A-series, Dolby modes | Hidden earpiece slot as second channel |
| Xiaomi and Redmi | Bundled case and protector blockage | Check protector over the top slot |
| Oppo and Vivo | Same bottom-slot pattern | Test with case off |
| Realme | Same bottom-slot pattern | Same case-off rule |
| Tablet | Test in your usual orientation, all drivers | Sweep in both orientations |
| Laptop | Left right balance, desk dust in grilles | Brush grilles before re-judging |
| Bluetooth speaker | Connection quality, then drivers | Move closer if sound stutters |
| Headphones, earbuds, AirPods | One side at a time, battery levels | Never loud tests while worn |
Listen safely
Safe listening checklist
A correct test is never an uncomfortable one. Keep to these and the test stays gentle.
| Do | Do not | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Start low | Start at the highest level | Loud surprises help nothing |
| Raise slowly | Jump to full volume | Your ears judge better with a ramp |
| Remove earbuds for loud tests | Run sweeps while wearing earbuds | Drivers sit millimeters from the eardrum |
| Turn off Bluetooth for phone speaker | Trust silence with Bluetooth on | Routing steals sound silently |
| Stop if uncomfortable | Push through harsh sound | Discomfort is never part of a correct test |
| Treat this as a speaker check | Use this as a hearing test | Hearing health belongs to audiologists |
| Keep loud tests short | Play loud sweeps for long periods | Long loud runs help no diagnosis |
| Take crackling after water seriously | Ignore crackle and keep testing loud | Moisture plus loud tones stresses the driver |
Answers in plain words
Frequently asked questions
Everything people ask about the Speaker Test, kept short and honest.
What is a speaker test?
How do I test my speaker online?
Can I test my phone speaker without an app?
Does this speaker test need microphone access?
Does this tool record my audio?
How do I test left and right speakers?
What is a left right speaker test?
Why is one speaker quieter than the other?
Why does my speaker crackle during the test?
Why does my speaker buzz at some frequencies?
Why is my speaker sound muffled?
Can this test tell if water is in my speaker?
Can this test tell if dust is blocking my speaker?
Can this test check my call speaker?
Is this a mic test?
Is this a hearing test?
Is the frequency sweep safe?
Should I use headphones for this test?
Can I test earbuds or AirPods?
Can I test a Bluetooth speaker?
Is this safe for iPhone?
Is this safe for Android?
What does speaker test kaise kare mean?
What does phone speaker test kaise kare mean?
What should I do if no sound plays?
What should I do after the speaker test?
Final step
Test your speaker, then choose the right fix
The test takes a minute and removes the guesswork that wastes the hour. Run the quick Speaker Test, note what you hear, and act only on what the sound told you: clean if blockage is the story, dry if water is, fix the setting if software is, and see a technician if hardware keeps insisting. Then run the same test once more and let your own ears confirm the result. No app, no recording, no claims this page cannot keep, and the test is here every time your sound makes you wonder.
