Free Online OBS Mic Test — No Registration Required

Mic Test for OBS — Free Online Setup, Monitor & Fix Your Audio

The free, browser-based OBS microphone tester. Check input levels, simulate noise gate, test gain staging, and monitor live waveforms before you go live — no download, no sign-up, works on any device.

Live Mic Monitor OBS Studio Ready Gain Staging Noise Gate Sim Streamers Streamers & Creators USB & XLR Mics
OBS_MIC_ANALYZER — mictestpro.com
⏸ IDLE
Input Device
OBS Stream Mode
Live Waveform & Spectrum
dBFS RMS
Peak dBFS
Fund. Hz
Input Level Monitor
Input Level0%
L Channel0%
R Channel0%
Sample Rate
Bit Depth
Channels
Noise Floor
Gain Status
Clipping
Latency
Gate Status
OBS Audio Filters Simulation
Noise Gate
Cuts mic when below threshold
Noise Suppression
Removes background hiss
EQ / Equaliser
Shape your frequency response
Compressor
Evens out loud/quiet levels
Gain Filter
Software volume boost/cut
High Pass Filter
Removes low rumble below 80Hz
Noise Gate Settings
Input Gain 100%
OBS Pre-Live Checklist
Microphone detected & selected in OBS
Go to Settings → Audio → Mic/Aux Device and choose your mic.
Input level showing in OBS mixer (-18 to -12 dBFS)
Speak at normal volume and watch the mixer bar — aim for the green zone.
Noise Gate added and thresholds tuned
Add Noise Gate filter — close threshold around -32 dB, open around -26 dB.
Noise Suppression filter active (RNNoise or Speex)
RNNoise is preferred — removes keyboard clicks, fans and HVAC noise.
Monitoring mode set to "Monitor and Output"
Lets you hear yourself live without it going into the stream audio.
Sample rate set to 48000 Hz in OBS and OS
Mismatched sample rates cause pitch issues. Match Windows/macOS to OBS.
No clipping in test recording
Run a 30-second test recording and listen back for any distortion at loud parts.

▶ TEST RECORDING PLAYBACK

How It Works

How to Test Your Mic for OBS in 4 Steps

Our free online OBS mic test gives you all the data you need to set up broadcast-quality audio — right from your browser, with no software download required.

01

Grant Mic Permission

Click "Start Mic Test" and allow browser access to your microphone. Your audio is processed locally — it never leaves your device.

02

Select Your Device

Choose your USB mic, XLR interface, gaming headset, or laptop mic from the dropdown. All detected devices are listed automatically.

03

Pick Your Stream Mode

Select General Stream, Gaming, Podcast, or Music mode to see mode-specific recommended settings and gain targets for OBS.

04

Analyse & Record

Watch your live waveform, level meter, dBFS reading, and noise floor. Hit "Record Test" to capture a sample and listen back instantly.

05

Tune Noise Gate

Open the noise gate panel and adjust thresholds to match your environment. See the gate status update live as you speak.

06

Run OBS Check

Click "OBS Check" to get a personalised recommendation report based on your actual signal — levels, sample rate, clipping, noise floor, and more.

OBS Audio Settings

Recommended OBS Audio Settings for Streaming

Getting these settings right in OBS Studio is the single biggest upgrade you can make to your stream quality. Correct audio matters more than video resolution.

Most streamers focus on video bitrate and scene transitions while neglecting the audio pipeline that their viewers actually hear. A properly configured microphone in OBS makes your stream sound professional even with a budget microphone. The key is to match your operating system audio settings to OBS, apply the right filters in the correct order, and set your input gain so your voice sits in the ideal range of -18 to -12 dBFS during normal speech.

OBS Audio Settings — Quick Reference

OBS Studio → Settings → Audio

SettingRecommended Value
Sample Rate48000 Hz
ChannelsStereo or Mono
Mic/Aux DeviceYour primary mic
Desktop AudioDefault
Monitoring DeviceYour headphones

OBS Audio Mixer Targets

SignalTarget Level
Voice (talking)-18 to -12 dBFS
Peak (loud moments)Max -6 dBFS
Noise Floor (room)Below -60 dBFS
Game Audio-20 to -15 dBFS
Music / BGM-30 to -25 dBFS

Compare Stream Modes: Gaming vs Podcast vs Music

🎮 Gaming Stream

Target Level-15 dBFS
Noise Gate-32 dB
SuppressionRNNoise
Compressor3:1 ratio
High Pass80 Hz

🎙️ Podcast / Talk

Target Level-12 dBFS
Noise Gate-45 dB
SuppressionSpeex -30
Compressor4:1 ratio
High Pass100 Hz

🎵 Music / Singing

Target Level-18 dBFS
Noise GateOff / -55 dB
SuppressionOff
Compressor2:1 ratio
High Pass60 Hz
OBS Filter Guide

The 6 OBS Audio Filters Every Streamer Needs

OBS Studio comes with powerful built-in audio filters. Adding them in the right order transforms an average mic into a broadcast-quality sound source — completely free.

In OBS, right-click your mic source in the Audio Mixer and select Filters. Add the filters below in order — the order matters because each filter processes the signal passed to it from the previous one. The standard filter chain for streaming is: High Pass Filter → Noise Suppression → Noise Gate → EQ → Compressor → Gain.

1
High Pass Filter (HPF)
Cuts all frequencies below a set point, removing low-frequency rumble from desk vibrations, HVAC systems, and mic handling noise. Transparent to the listener but removes muddy low-end.
Recommended cutoff: 80–100 Hz · Rolloff: 12dB/Oct
2
Noise Suppression
Removes steady-state background noise like fans, air conditioning, and electrical hiss. OBS offers two options: Speex (lighter CPU) and RNNoise (AI-powered, better quality). Use RNNoise if your PC can handle it.
RNNoise: Suppress by -30 · Speex: Suppress by -30
3
Noise Gate
Acts like a door for audio — when you're silent, it closes completely, blocking all noise. When you speak above the open threshold, it opens and lets your voice through. Prevents dead-air noise between sentences.
Close threshold: -32 dB · Open threshold: -26 dB · Attack: 25ms · Hold: 200ms · Release: 150ms
4
Equaliser (EQ)
Shapes the tonal character of your voice. Boost presence (2–5 kHz) for clarity, cut harshness (3–4 kHz) if your voice is nasal, add warmth by boosting 200–300 Hz. Use a modest 3dB cut/boost approach.
OBS 3-Band EQ: Low shelf +2dB at 200Hz · Mid cut -2dB at 3kHz · High shelf +3dB at 10kHz
5
Compressor
Reduces the dynamic range between your loudest and quietest moments, making your voice consistently audible even when you whisper or exclaim. Essential for gaming streams where your voice competes with game audio.
Ratio: 3:1 · Threshold: -18 dB · Attack: 6ms · Release: 60ms · Output Gain: +3dB
6
Gain Filter (Final Trim)
A final volume adjustment applied after all other filters. Use this to bring your processed signal up to the target level of -12 to -18 dBFS without adjusting the physical gain on your interface or mic.
Adjust until mixer peaks at -12 dBFS during normal speech
Mic Types

Best Microphone Types for OBS Streaming

Different microphone types respond differently in OBS. Understanding your mic type helps you choose the right filter settings and solve problems faster.

🎤

USB Condenser

Plug-and-play, high sensitivity. Most popular for streamers. Works natively in OBS with no interface. Blue Yeti, HyperX QuadCast style.

🎚️

XLR Dynamic

Broadcast quality with an audio interface. Rejects room noise naturally. Shure SM7B, Rode PodMic style. Needs +gain in OBS.

🎧

Headset Mic

Built into gaming headsets. Convenient but picks up more room noise. Use aggressive noise suppression and a tighter noise gate.

💻

Built-In Laptop

Acceptable for casual streaming. Apply maximum noise suppression. Avoid in noisy environments. Use a pop filter if possible.

📱

Wireless / Lavalier

Great for IRL streams or face-cam only setups. Watch for Bluetooth compression artefacts. Use a compressor to catch dropout artifacts.

🔌

USB Interface + Condenser

Professional setup. Use Scarlett Solo or similar. Set 48V phantom power, adjust preamp gain before OBS filters for best results.

Why Your OBS Mic Sounds Bad — Common Problems & Fixes

Common OBS Mic Problems

  • Mic too quiet — gain not set, Windows boost needed
  • Clipping / distortion — mic too close or gain too high
  • Echo / reverb — room acoustics, no treatment
  • Background noise constant — no noise suppression filter
  • Cutting in and out — noise gate threshold too high
  • Robotic voice — wrong sample rate, usually 44.1 vs 48kHz
  • Mic not showing in OBS — driver issue or not selected
  • Delay / sync issues — monitoring mode set incorrectly

Step-by-Step Fixes

  • For quiet mic: Add Gain filter in OBS, +10–15 dB as starting point
  • For clipping: Reduce Windows mic boost, lower interface preamp
  • For echo: Add acoustic foam panels or use a directional dynamic mic
  • For background noise: Enable RNNoise suppression, close windows
  • For cutting out: Lower noise gate close threshold by -5 dB
  • For robotic sound: Set OBS and OS sample rate both to 48000 Hz
  • For missing mic: Check OBS Settings → Audio → Mic/Aux Device
  • For delay: Disable Monitor Only mode, use Monitor and Output
Pro Tips

Advanced OBS Audio Tips for Streamers & Creators

Level up your stream audio with these professional techniques used by full-time content creators — all achievable for free inside OBS Studio.

Gain Staging

Set Gain Before Filters

Adjust your physical mic/interface gain first so your raw signal peaks around -18 dBFS. Then use the OBS Gain filter only for fine trimming. This gives every subsequent filter cleaner signal to work with.

Monitoring

Use Audio Monitoring

In OBS Audio Mixer, click the gear icon on your mic and set monitoring to "Monitor and Output" — then select your headphones as the monitoring device. Hear exactly what your audience hears in real time.

Routing

Separate Audio Tracks

In OBS Settings → Output → Recording, assign your mic to Track 2 and game audio to Track 1. This lets you edit them independently in post-production — essential for VOD creators who edit streams into YouTube content.

Room Treatment

Improve Room Acoustics

Hang a thick blanket or duvet behind your streaming position to reduce reflections. Bookcases, carpet, and soft furnishings all absorb sound. A treated room removes reverb that no OBS filter can fully fix.

Positioning

Mic Placement Matters

Position your mic 6–8 inches from your mouth, just below or to the side — never directly in line with your breath. Use a pop filter or windsock to prevent plosive bursts on P and B sounds that no gate can fix.

Test First

Always Record a Test Clip

Before every stream, record 30 seconds of normal talking in OBS and listen back on headphones. Check for noise, clipping, echo, and level. Using this tool's Record Test button gives you the same check in seconds.

OBS Compatibility — Works With Every Setup

Windows 10/11
Full support · All drivers
macOS
OBS 29+ · Apple Silicon
Linux
PulseAudio / PipeWire
USB Mics
Plug & play · No driver
XLR + Interface
ASIO · CoreAudio · WASAPI
Gaming Headsets
All brands supported
FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions — OBS Mic Test

Everything streamers and content creators need to know about testing and setting up microphone audio in OBS Studio.

How do I test my microphone for OBS without opening OBS?

Use this free online mic test tool — no download or registration required. Click "Start Mic Test", grant browser microphone permission, and instantly see your live input levels, waveform, dBFS reading, noise floor, and frequency response. The data shown matches exactly what OBS would receive from your microphone, so you can diagnose issues and set gain levels before even opening OBS Studio.

What should my mic level be in OBS for streaming?

For streaming, your microphone should peak between -18 dBFS and -12 dBFS during normal speech, with absolute peaks no higher than -6 dBFS. In the OBS mixer, the green zone is your target — the bar should dance in the lower-to-middle green area while talking and never consistently hit yellow or red. If you're consistently in the red, reduce your gain. If the bar barely moves, increase your input gain or add a Gain filter.

Why does my microphone sound robotic or have a weird pitch in OBS?

A robotic or pitch-shifted voice in OBS is almost always caused by a sample rate mismatch. Your operating system and OBS need to use the same sample rate — usually 48000 Hz. On Windows, right-click your mic in Sound Settings → Properties → Advanced and set it to 48000 Hz (studio quality). Then in OBS, go to Settings → Audio and also set it to 48 kHz. Mismatched rates of 44.1 kHz vs 48 kHz cause the robotic effect.

What is the best noise gate setting for OBS streaming?

The standard starting point for OBS Noise Gate is: Close Threshold: -32 dB, Open Threshold: -26 dB, Attack: 25ms, Hold: 200ms, Release: 150ms. You'll need to adjust these based on your room noise. Use this tool's live noise gate simulator — speak and watch the Gate Status indicator. If your voice is cutting in and out, lower the close threshold by 3–5 dB. If room noise is still audible between sentences, raise the close threshold slightly.

Should I use RNNoise or Speex noise suppression in OBS?

RNNoise is the better choice for most streamers. It uses an AI/machine learning model to distinguish between speech and noise, producing much more natural results than Speex. It removes fans, keyboard noise, and HVAC without the metallic artifacts that Speex can introduce at high suppression levels. The downside is higher CPU usage — typically 3–5% extra. If you're on an older CPU or running a resource-heavy game, Speex at -30 dB suppression is a reliable fallback that sounds good without hurting performance.

My microphone is too quiet in OBS — how do I fix it?

There are several places to increase mic volume for OBS. First, check Windows Sound Settings and enable Microphone Boost (+10 or +20 dB) under the mic's Properties → Levels tab. Second, if using a USB mic, check any companion software (Blue Sherpa, HyperX NGENUITY) for gain controls. Third, add a Gain filter in OBS — right-click your mic source in the mixer, go to Filters, add Gain, and increase by +10 to +20 dB until your voice peaks in the -18 to -12 dBFS range. Avoid boosting more than +20 dB as it amplifies noise significantly.

How do I monitor my microphone audio in OBS without echo?

To hear yourself without echo, you need to: (1) Use headphones, not speakers — speakers cause acoustic feedback loops. (2) In OBS Audio Mixer, click the gear icon on your mic track, select Advanced Audio Properties, and set Audio Monitoring to Monitor and Output. (3) Set your monitoring device to your headphones in OBS Settings → Audio → Monitoring Device. You'll hear your processed voice (with all filters applied) in your headphones but without it feeding back into the mic.

Does this OBS mic test tool record or store my audio?

No — your audio is processed entirely on your local device using the browser's Web Audio API. Nothing is transmitted to our servers or stored anywhere. The "Record Test" feature creates a temporary recording that only exists in your browser's memory during your session — it is deleted the moment you close or refresh the tab. We never collect, upload, or analyse your voice recordings. This is a fully private, client-side tool.

What is the best microphone for OBS streaming on a budget?

For under $50, the Fifine K669B USB mic or Samson Q2U are excellent starting points with good OBS compatibility. In the $100–150 range, the Blue Yeti Nano, HyperX QuadCast S, and Rode NT-USB Mini all deliver professional-sounding audio straight into OBS with minimal filter work needed. For the biggest quality leap, a Rode PodMic or Shure SM58 with a Focusrite Scarlett Solo interface at around $200 total gives broadcast-grade results that professional streamers use.

How do I add my microphone as a separate audio track in OBS for editing?

Go to OBS Settings → Output → Recording and switch to Advanced Output Mode. Set the recording format to MKV or MP4 and you'll see Audio Track options (1–6). In your Scene's Audio Mixer, right-click your mic and open Advanced Audio Properties. Assign your mic to Track 2 only (uncheck Track 1). Assign game/desktop audio to Track 1 only. When you record and import into DaVinci Resolve, Premiere, or Final Cut, your mic will appear on a separate audio track, making it easy to edit, EQ, and balance independently.