The most advanced free online headphone test — check left/right stereo balance, bass response, frequency range, audio phasing, and sound imaging. Works with any headphones, earbuds, or speakers. No download, no sign-up, instant results.
Free browser-based headphone test — no download, no sign-up, instant audio analysis.
Connect your headphones or earbuds to your device via 3.5mm jack, USB, or Bluetooth before starting. Make sure they are set as the default audio output in your system settings.
Hit Start Headphone Test. The tool activates the audio analyzer and begins monitoring your output device with real-time waveform and spectrum visualization.
Use the Left/Right Channel Test panel to play audio in the left ear only, right ear only, both together, or alternating between channels to confirm proper stereo wiring.
Click individual bass frequency buttons (20Hz–200Hz) to check if your headphones reproduce deep sub-bass, regular bass, and mid-bass. Watch the bass response bars update live.
Tap frequency buttons from 40Hz up to 20kHz to identify the full range your headphones can reproduce. Stop hearing a tone? That is the upper limit of your headphone response.
Run Phase Test to detect wiring issues, Binaural Sweep to check spatial imaging, Pink Noise and White Noise for full-spectrum analysis, and Frequency Sweep for a complete range scan.
More diagnostic capability than any other free online headphone test tool.
The most important headphone test — confirms that both left and right channels are working and balanced. Detects a dead channel, wiring fault, connector damage, or driver imbalance instantly. Essential for any headphone with a split cable or worn audio jack.
Tests how well your headphones reproduce low frequencies from 20Hz (deepest sub-bass, felt more than heard) through 250Hz (mid-bass punch). Most consumer earbuds roll off below 40Hz. This test reveals your headphones' true low-end capability instantly and for free.
Tests the full human hearing range from 20Hz to 20kHz. Play individual frequency tones to find the lowest and highest frequencies your headphones can reproduce. Identifies high-frequency roll-off (harshness or dullness) and pinpoints resonance peaks in the midrange.
Out-of-phase audio causes a thin, hollow, incoherent sound where bass disappears and the stereo image collapses. The Phase Test plays an in-phase signal and checks your headphones' stereo imaging coherence. This is a known cause of "flat" or "weird" sounding audio.
Visualizes your audio signal as a real-time oscilloscope wave — showing the exact shape of the sound being output. A clean sine wave at a single frequency confirms driver linearity. Distortion appears as an irregular, jagged waveform instead of a smooth curve.
Test any headphone type — over-ear studio headphones, in-ear monitors (IEMs), earbuds, wireless Bluetooth headsets, gaming headsets, noise-cancelling headphones, bone-conduction headphones, open-back audiophile headphones, and external speakers. No app needed, completely free.
If the test reveals an issue, follow these steps to fix your headphones.
Clean the 3.5mm headphone jack with a dry cotton swab. Try gently wiggling the connector while audio plays — if sound cuts in, the jack is worn. Try a different audio port or test via Bluetooth to isolate the fault to the cable vs. driver.
Open Windows Sound Settings → your output device → Properties → Levels. Check that the left/right balance slider is centered. On Mac, go to System Settings → Sound → Output and check the Balance slider is in the middle.
Bass loss in headphones is often caused by a partially unplugged jack, worn-out drivers, or Bluetooth using a low-quality codec. Try inserting the 3.5mm jack fully. For Bluetooth, turn off AAC or aptX in your device settings and reconnect to use SBC for comparison.
A hollow, empty sound with no bass is a classic sign of out-of-phase audio. Check that your headphone cable is not damaged near the Y-split. Try the Phase Test in the Advanced Tests panel — if the stereo image sounds wider than expected, phase reversal is likely.
Crackling at low frequencies usually means a blown or damaged driver. Test at multiple bass frequencies — if crackle appears only at high volume, reduce your system volume and check for software enhancement settings like Bass Boost that can clip the signal.
If you cannot hear 12kHz–16kHz tones, your headphones may have rolled-off high-frequency response (common in many bass-heavy consumer headphones). It can also indicate hearing fatigue — rest your ears and retest. Truly flat high-frequency rolloff is a hardware limitation.
Bluetooth headphones often use compressed audio codecs. Ensure your device and headphones both support high-quality codecs (aptX, LDAC, AAC). On Windows, check the Bluetooth device properties and select the highest quality audio format available.
If the browser test shows no output device change when you plug in headphones, check Windows Sound settings → Playback and set your headphones as the Default Device. On Mac, go to System Settings → Sound → Output and manually select the headphone output.
Everything about this free online headphone test — left right check, bass test, and more.
Sign in to your account