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Sound Test Online Check Speaker Sound Free

The most advanced free online speaker sound test — check left and right channel balance, stereo imaging, bass response, volume output, and frequency range. Use this sound test to quickly find out if your speakers are working, without leaving the browser. Click the arrow to play a tone through your left or right speaker.

100% Free No Downloads No Registration Left Right Test Bass Check Frequency Test PC Speakers Bluetooth Headphones Mobile
SPEAKER_SOUND_TESTER — mictestpro.com
LEFT / RIGHT SPEAKER TEST
⏸ IDLE
Speaker Health Report
Left Speaker
Right Speaker
Balance
Bass Output
Volume
Overall
Speaker Channel Test — Click Arrow to Play
🔊
Left Speaker
← L CHANNEL ONLY
🎶
Both Speakers
← L + R STEREO →
🔊
Right Speaker
R CHANNEL ONLY →
Live Audio Visualizer
LEFT
0%
BALANCE
RIGHT
0%
Oscilloscope Waveform — Live
Frequency Spectrum Analyzer
MASTER OUTPUT LEVELPEAK: —
Bass Frequency Bands — Real Time
Sub Bass20–60 Hz
0%
Bass60–250 Hz
0%
Midrange250Hz–4kHz
0%
Treble4–20 kHz
0%
Sound Test Suite
Frequency Tone Test
40Hz
Sub
80Hz
Bass
120Hz
Bass
250Hz
Mid
500Hz
Mid
1kHz
Mid
2kHz
Upper
4kHz
Treble
8kHz
High
12kHz
High
16kHz
Air
20kHz
Limit
Volume Level Test
60
%
VOL
25%
60%
80%
100%
Volume 60%
Custom Hz 1kHz
Advanced Sound Tests
📻
Pink Noise
Full spectrum — natural balance
📡
White Noise
Equal energy all frequencies
🌀
Binaural Pan Sweep
Stereo panning L → R → L
📶
Frequency Sweep
20Hz → 20kHz full scan
🔁
Alternating L/R
Channel switch every 700ms
🎵
440Hz Reference Tone
Standard A4 tuning reference
Sub Bass Depth Test
20Hz
Deepest
25Hz
Sub
30Hz
Sub
40Hz
Sub
50Hz
Sub
60Hz
Bass
80Hz
Bass
100Hz
Bass
150Hz
Mid Bass
200Hz
Mid Bass
Can you hear 20Hz? Most laptop speakers cut off at 80–100Hz. External speakers extend to 40–60Hz. Subwoofers reach 20–30Hz. The deepest sub-bass is felt more than heard.
Output Options
Spectrum Analyzer
Real-time frequency display
Oscilloscope Wave
Live audio waveform shape
Stereo Meters
L/R channel level tracking
Bass Band Meters
Sub/bass/mid/treble tracking

How to Test Your Speaker Sound Online

Free browser-based speaker sound test — no download, no sign-up, results in seconds.

01

Connect Your Speakers

Make sure your speakers or headphones are connected and set as the default audio output in Windows, Mac, or mobile settings before starting the test.

02

Click Start Sound Test

Hit the Start button to activate the live audio analyzer and visualizer. The oscilloscope, spectrum, and stereo meters all come alive instantly.

03

Test Left & Right Channels

Click the left arrow (←) to play sound through the left speaker only. Click the right arrow (→) for right speaker only. Both arrows together test full stereo output.

04

Check Bass Response

Use the Sub Bass Depth Test panel to play tones from 20Hz upward. The lowest tone your speakers can reproduce is their real low-frequency limit. Watch the bass bars respond live.

05

Run Frequency Tone Test

Click individual frequency buttons from 40Hz to 20kHz. If a tone becomes inaudible, you have found the upper frequency limit of your speakers or your hearing range.

06

Use Advanced Tests

Run Pink Noise for a full-spectrum balance check, Binaural Pan Sweep for stereo imaging, Frequency Sweep for a complete scan, White Noise for treble response, and the Alternating L/R test to confirm both channels switch correctly.

What This Speaker Sound Test Checks

The most detailed free online speaker test — checks everything other tools miss.

Left/Right Stereo Balance

Verifies that both the left and right speaker channels are working, have equal volume output, and are correctly wired for stereo imaging. A failed left/right test reveals a blown driver, damaged cable, faulty 3.5mm connector, or an incorrect audio output device selection in your system settings.

Bass & Sub-Bass Output

Tests how deep your speakers go in the low frequencies. Laptop built-in speakers typically can't reproduce below 100Hz. Desktop speakers extend to 60–80Hz. Speakers with a subwoofer can reach 20–40Hz. The 4-band live bass meter shows sub, bass, midrange, and treble energy in real time as you play any tone or test.

Full Frequency Range

12 individual tone buttons cover the full audible spectrum from 40Hz to 20kHz. Finding the highest frequency you cannot hear reveals both your speaker's physical limits and your own hearing ceiling. The live frequency spectrum analyzer shows all bands reacting simultaneously during any audio playback.

Live Waveform Oscilloscope

Displays the real-time audio waveform shape on an oscilloscope canvas. A clean sine wave at a single frequency confirms your speaker is reproducing the signal accurately and linearly. Distortion, clipping, or a ragged waveform at certain frequencies indicates speaker driver damage or digital clipping from excessive volume.

Volume Output Level

The master output level meter and peak tracker confirms your speakers are producing adequate volume at each level setting. Test at 25%, 60%, 80%, and 100% volume to find the point where distortion starts, identify volume channel imbalance at different levels, or confirm that the audio output is not clipping or maxed out.

Works on All Speakers

Tests any audio output — laptop built-in speakers, desktop PC speakers, external USB speakers, Bluetooth wireless speakers, bookshelf HiFi speakers, soundbars, home theater systems, gaming headsets, studio monitors, and earphones. All tested free with no installation, no account creation, and no browser extension needed.

Fix Common Speaker Problems

If the sound test reveals a problem, use these step-by-step fixes.

Fix 01

One Speaker Not Working

Check your Windows Sound Settings → Playback → your device → Properties → Levels. Confirm the Balance slider is centered. Try a different audio jack port. On laptops, test via headphone output vs. internal speakers separately to isolate the fault.

Fix 02

No Sound at All

Right-click the speaker icon in the Windows taskbar → Open Sound Settings → Output. Confirm your speakers are the selected output device and volume is not at zero. Check that the speaker is powered on. On Mac, go to System Settings → Sound → Output and select the correct device.

Fix 03

Sound Only from One Side

This is usually a faulty audio cable, a worn stereo jack, or a Balance setting skewed to one side. First check your OS Balance slider (Windows: Sound → Playback → Properties → Levels; Mac: Sound → Balance slider). Then test a different cable or audio port.

Fix 04

No Bass from Speakers

If the sub-bass test shows no response below 100Hz, first check that your subwoofer (if you have one) is powered and connected. In Windows, open Enhancements for your speaker and try disabling Bass Boost — it can paradoxically reduce bass by distorting the signal. Also check your speaker crossover settings.

Fix 05

Crackling or Distorted Sound

Crackling at high volume is usually audio clipping — reduce system volume to 70–80%. Crackling at any volume suggests a damaged speaker driver, loose cable connection, or interference. Disable Windows audio enhancements: Sound Settings → your device → Properties → Enhancements → Disable all.

Fix 06

Bluetooth Speaker Issues

Bluetooth speakers compress audio, reducing high-frequency detail and occasionally causing dropouts. Make sure the device is within 10 meters with no obstacles. Re-pair the device from scratch. On Windows, remove the device from Bluetooth settings and re-pair to refresh the audio codec negotiation.

Fix 07

Update Audio Drivers

Outdated Realtek or AMD audio drivers are one of the most common causes of audio problems including channel imbalance, missing frequencies, and distortion. Open Device Manager, expand Sound controllers, right-click your audio device and select Update driver → Search automatically for updated driver software.

Fix 08

Volume Too Low Despite Max Setting

Check that Windows system volume and application volume are both at maximum in the Volume Mixer. Some apps run at low application volume even when system volume is 100%. Also check Windows Loudness Equalization: Sound → your device → Properties → Enhancements → check Loudness Equalization.

Frequently Asked Questions

Everything about this free online speaker sound test — left/right check, bass, stereo, and more.

Is this online speaker sound test completely free?+
Yes — 100% free with zero hidden costs, no subscription, no premium plan, and no registration required. Every feature including left/right channel test, frequency tones, bass test, oscilloscope waveform, spectrum analyzer, binaural sweep, pink noise, white noise, frequency sweep, and all stereo monitoring is completely free. Use it unlimited times on any device, in any browser.
How do I test if my left or right speaker is working?+
Use the Speaker Channel Test section at the top of the tool. Click the left-facing arrow (←) next to the Left Speaker card — you should hear sound only from your left speaker. Click the right-facing arrow (→) next to the Right Speaker card — sound should come from the right speaker only. If one side is silent, that channel has a fault. This is the fastest free way to diagnose a dead speaker channel online without any software.
Do I need to download anything or create an account?+
No downloads, no account creation, no browser plugin, no Flash, and no extensions are required. This is a fully browser-based online sound test that runs entirely using the Web Audio API built into every modern browser. Open the page, click Start Sound Test — the entire suite of speaker tests is immediately available, completely free and with no sign-up.
Why can't I hear the 20Hz or very low bass tones?+
There are two reasons: your speakers or the room acoustics may physically not reproduce frequencies that low, and/or your hearing threshold at sub-bass frequencies is higher than the playback volume. Laptop built-in speakers typically cannot reproduce below 80–120Hz. Desktop speakers can usually reach 50–80Hz. Speakers with a subwoofer reach 20–40Hz. Try increasing the volume slider before testing bass tones. At 20–30Hz, the sensation is felt as physical vibration rather than heard as a distinct pitch.
What does Pink Noise test on speakers?+
Pink noise contains equal energy per octave across all frequencies, closely matching how human hearing perceives loudness. It is the professional standard used in speaker testing and room acoustic measurements. When you play pink noise through your speakers, a well-balanced speaker system produces an even, natural-sounding result. If it sounds excessively bright, your speakers have elevated treble or a treble peak. If it sounds dull and heavy, bass is overemphasized or treble is rolled off.
Can I test Bluetooth speakers with this tool?+
Yes. Connect your Bluetooth speaker and make sure it is selected as the default audio output device in your system settings. Then use this free online sound test exactly as you would with wired speakers. Note that Bluetooth audio uses compression codecs that may reduce the quality of high-frequency tones and limit the sub-bass response. The frequency range test is an excellent way to compare your Bluetooth speaker's output directly against wired audio.
What does the Binaural Pan Sweep test?+
The Binaural Pan Sweep plays a continuous tone that smoothly pans from the left speaker to the right speaker and back, creating a side-to-side audio movement. This tests your stereo imaging — confirming both channels work, that the volume is balanced between them, and that the stereo field is properly set up. If the sound jumps abruptly rather than sweeping smoothly, or is heard only on one side, there is a balance or connectivity issue with one of your speakers.
How do I fix uneven volume between left and right speakers?+
First use this free online sound test to confirm the imbalance is real — run Left Only and Right Only channel tests and compare the perceived volume. Then go to Windows Sound Settings → Playback → your output device → Properties → Levels and check that the Balance slider is exactly centered. On Mac, go to System Settings → Sound → Output → Balance slider. If software balance is centered but the imbalance persists, the issue is hardware — a faulty cable, worn speaker driver, or damaged audio connector.
What is the Frequency Sweep and how do I use it?+
The Frequency Sweep plays a sine wave tone that rises continuously from 20Hz to 20kHz over 8 seconds, covering the entire human hearing range in one test. Listen carefully as the sweep rises. The lowest frequency you can hear confirms your speaker's bass extension. Gaps or sudden volume drops in the middle of the sweep indicate resonance problems or frequency response dips. The highest frequency you can hear before it disappears is the upper limit of both your speaker's output and your own hearing.
Why is this speaker test better than other free tools online?+
Most free speaker tests offer only a left channel and right channel audio file. This tool provides: arrow-button left/right channel test cards with per-channel waveform previews, dual horizontal stereo level meters, a live oscilloscope waveform, real-time frequency spectrum analyzer, 4-band bass response meters (sub/bass/mid/treble), 12 frequency tone buttons (40Hz–20kHz), 10 sub-bass depth buttons (20Hz–200Hz), volume level presets with slider, 6 advanced sound tests (pink noise, white noise, binaural sweep, frequency sweep, alternating L/R, 440Hz reference), 6-point speaker health report, and 4 live monitoring toggles — all completely free, with no registration, no download, and no ads.