The most complete free online microphone test built specifically for Discord users. Check your mic input level against Discord's optimal range, view your live waveform and frequency spectrum, simulate how you sound inside a Discord voice channel, diagnose noise issues, clipping and signal problems, and fix them using our step-by-step Discord settings guide. Works on Chrome, Firefox, Edge, iPhone and Android. No download, no sign-up, no registration required.
Test your microphone for Discord in seconds. Free, online, no download or registration required.
Open this free Discord mic test on Chrome, Firefox, Edge, Safari on iPhone or Chrome on Android. No download, no Discord account, no registration is required. The microphone test works entirely in your browser using the Web Audio API. Click the Start Mic Test button and your browser will ask for microphone permission. Press Allow to grant access and the test begins instantly.
If you have multiple audio input devices connected, use the microphone dropdown selector to choose the specific device you want to test for Discord. Click Refresh Mics to populate the full list of available microphones, headsets, USB audio interfaces and Bluetooth devices connected to your computer. Select the same device you have set as your input in Discord Voice and Video settings for an accurate comparison.
The large dBFS number at the top of the tool shows your live microphone level in real time. Discord works best with input levels between -30 dBFS and -10 dBFS when you are speaking. The colour-coded LED strip below the number shows your signal intensity visually. Green indicates a healthy level, yellow indicates a slightly hot signal and red flashes indicate clipping or distortion which will sound bad to your teammates in Discord voice channels.
The Discord Voice Channel Simulator panel shows exactly how you appear to others in a live Discord voice channel. The green ring animation activates when your voice is detected, exactly as it does in Discord. The target range bar shows whether your microphone level falls inside Discord's optimal input range of -30 dBFS to -10 dBFS. If your level consistently falls below -40 dBFS you are too quiet. Above -6 dBFS risks clipping distortion.
The live waveform canvas shows the raw audio signal from your microphone as an oscilloscope trace. A flat line indicates no signal or the mic is muted. The frequency spectrum below shows which frequency bands are most active. For speech, the dominant energy should appear in the 80 to 3000 Hz range. Peaks in the very high frequencies can indicate hiss or fan noise. Peaks below 80 Hz indicate room rumble, air conditioning or desk vibration being picked up.
The Noise Analysis section shows your microphone's noise floor (how loud it is when you are not speaking), the signal-to-noise ratio in decibels, the number of clipping events recorded during the session, the average level over time, and the dynamic range of your mic signal. Use these metrics alongside the Common Discord Mic Problems and Fixes section below the tool to diagnose and correct any issues before joining your next Discord voice call.
More Discord mic testing features than any other free online tool. No registration required.
The real-time dBFS (decibels relative to full scale) meter shows your microphone input level with near-zero latency using the Web Audio API AnalyserNode. The large numeric readout updates every animation frame at 60fps so you can see transient peaks that a slower meter would miss. The colour-coded LED strip visualises 32 individual level bands giving you a precise view of your input strength. Discord's automatic gain control and input sensitivity gate work best when your natural speaking level sits between -30 and -10 dBFS as measured by this tool.
Two real-time canvas visualisations run simultaneously. The waveform canvas draws the raw time-domain audio signal from the microphone as an oscilloscope trace. The width of the waveform trace and how far it deviates from the centre line directly corresponds to your volume and signal strength. The frequency spectrum canvas below it shows the FFT (Fast Fourier Transform) breakdown of your audio across all frequency bands using 1024 sample bins. This lets you see exactly where your audio energy is distributed and identify problem frequencies like low-frequency rumble, mid-range resonance or high-frequency hiss.
The Discord Voice Channel Simulator panel recreates the visual and functional behaviour of Discord's voice channel user interface directly in this free online test. The speaking ring animation around your avatar pulses green whenever your audio level crosses the voice detection threshold, exactly matching Discord's own speaking indicator behaviour. The target range bar shows in real time whether your microphone level is inside the optimal Discord input range of -30 to -10 dBFS. The volume bar and dBFS readout next to your user tile update at 60fps matching Discord's own level display update rate.
The five-metric Noise Analysis panel provides a comprehensive acoustic assessment of your microphone. The Noise Floor metric measures the average signal level when you are not speaking, which reveals background noise from fans, HVAC systems, room acoustics and electrical interference. The Signal-to-Noise Ratio in decibels shows how clearly your voice stands above the background noise. A healthy SNR for Discord voice communication is above 30 dB. The Clipping counter tracks how many times your signal exceeded 0 dBFS during the session. The Average Level and Dynamic Range metrics help you optimise your microphone gain for consistent Discord communication.
The Level History Graph plots a scrolling 30-second history of your microphone level over time as a line graph drawn on an HTML5 canvas element. This allows you to see patterns in your microphone behaviour such as consistent noise spikes, gradual level drift, the effect of adjusting your Discord input sensitivity slider, or whether your microphone level drops when you turn your head away from it. The horizontal dashed reference lines at -30 dBFS and -10 dBFS mark Discord's optimal input range so you can see at a glance whether you are consistently within the target zone during natural speech.
This Discord mic test is completely free with no subscription, no premium tier, no account and no registration required. All audio processing happens locally in your browser using the Web Audio API. No audio data, no voice recordings and no personal information are sent to any server at any point during the test. The microphone stream is used only for real-time level analysis and visualisation. When you press Stop Test or close the browser tab, the microphone access is immediately released. Nothing is stored, nothing is uploaded and nothing is shared.
Use this guide to understand what your dBFS reading means for Discord voice quality.
| Level Range (dBFS) | Classification | How It Sounds in Discord | Recommended Action |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0 to -3 dBFS | Clipping / Distorted | Severely distorted, crackling, painful to listen to | Reduce microphone gain significantly or move mic further away |
| -3 to -6 dBFS | Too Hot | Overdriven, harsh on consonants, likely to clip on peaks | Lower input volume in Discord Voice Settings or on your device |
| -6 to -10 dBFS | Hot but Usable | Slightly overdriven, clear but risks peak distortion | Lower gain by 4 to 6 dB, enable automatic gain control in Discord |
| -10 to -20 dBFS | Optimal for Discord | Clear, natural, comfortable for all listeners | No action needed, this is the ideal Discord input range |
| -20 to -30 dBFS | Acceptable | Clear but on the quieter side, others may need to raise volume | Increase input volume slightly or move mic closer |
| -30 to -40 dBFS | Too Quiet | Hard to hear, others will struggle to make out speech | Increase Discord input volume to maximum and increase OS mic boost |
| Below -40 dBFS | Very Weak Signal | Nearly inaudible, possibly muted or wrong device selected | Check mic connection, select correct input device, enable mic in OS settings |
Use this free Discord mic test tool alongside these fixes to solve the most frequent Discord voice issues.
The most common cause is that Discord does not have permission to access your microphone. On Windows go to Settings then Privacy and Security then Microphone and make sure both the OS permission and the Discord app permission are enabled. On Mac go to System Settings then Privacy and Security then Microphone and tick Discord. After granting permission restart Discord completely. In Discord go to User Settings then Voice and Video and select the correct input device from the dropdown. Use this free online mic test first to confirm your microphone works at the browser level before troubleshooting Discord specifically.
If your level on this free mic test reads below -30 dBFS during normal speech, your microphone is too quiet for Discord. In Discord go to User Settings then Voice and Video then scroll to Input Volume and set it to 100 percent. Also check your operating system microphone volume: on Windows right-click the speaker icon then Open Sound Settings then find your microphone and ensure the level is at 80 percent or above. On Mac go to System Settings then Sound then Input and increase the input volume. If still quiet, enable Microphone Boost in Windows audio settings or move the microphone closer to your mouth.
Echo occurs when your microphone picks up audio coming from your speakers. The fix is to use headphones so your microphone cannot hear your speakers. Discord's echo cancellation (enabled in User Settings then Voice and Video then Advanced) reduces this automatically but works best when headphones are used. If you must use speakers, lower your speaker volume and position your microphone as far from your speakers as possible. The frequency spectrum on this free mic test will show a flat response if echo is eliminated. The presence of your own voice as a secondary peak in the spectrum indicates echo is still being picked up.
High background noise is shown as an elevated noise floor reading on this free online Discord mic test. Noise above -50 dBFS when you are not speaking indicates significant background noise that Discord will transmit during pauses. Enable Noise Suppression in Discord User Settings then Voice and Video then Advanced. Discord uses Krisp AI-based noise suppression which removes fan noise, keyboard clicks, HVAC and other consistent ambient noise effectively. For very noisy environments combine Discord noise suppression with a directional cardioid microphone and position the mic close to your mouth so the gain required is lower, reducing background noise pickup proportionally.
If your voice cuts in and out in Discord the most common cause is Voice Activity Detection mode with the input sensitivity threshold set too high. In Discord User Settings then Voice and Video, if Input Sensitivity is on automatic mode, try switching to Push to Talk to eliminate gate-related dropouts entirely. If you prefer Voice Activity, disable Automatically Determine Input Sensitivity and manually drag the sensitivity slider to a level below your normal speaking volume as shown on this free mic test. The silence gate should activate only during actual pauses, not during quieter words or the end of sentences.
A robotic or metallic voice effect in Discord is usually caused by packet loss or audio bitrate issues in the Discord voice connection. Check your internet connection stability. Discord's voice bitrate can be set per server channel by server admins, with higher Nitro Boost levels unlocking higher bitrates up to 384 kbps. Distortion that appears on this free online mic test (visible as flattened waveform peaks and red clipping indicator) is caused by microphone overload: lower your input gain in Discord or in your operating system settings. The clipping counter in the Noise Analysis section of this tool tracks distortion events during the test session.
If other Discord users report hearing themselves echoed back through your microphone, your headset or speaker audio is leaking into your microphone. Use closed-back headphones rather than open speakers. Enable Echo Cancellation in Discord User Settings then Voice and Video then Advanced. If using an open-back headset, the ear cups may not provide sufficient acoustic isolation. Check that Windows Stereo Mix or Listen to This Device is not enabled for your microphone in Windows Sound Settings as this routes speaker output back through the microphone. On Mac check that the output is not being routed back through an aggregate audio device.
Sudden unpredictable volume spikes in Discord are usually caused by Windows Automatic Gain Control (AGC) adjusting your microphone level unexpectedly. To disable this on Windows: right-click the speaker icon then Open Sound Settings then More Sound Settings then Recording tab then right-click your microphone then Properties then Enhancements tab and untick Automatic Gain Control. Also in the Levels tab of the same dialog check that Microphone Boost is at a stable setting. Some USB headsets have their own AGC built into the headset firmware which requires using the manufacturer's companion software to disable it. This free Discord mic test's level history graph will show these sudden spikes clearly as sharp vertical peaks in the 30-second scrolling graph.
A complete guide to every Discord microphone setting and what each one does for your voice quality.
The Input Device dropdown in Discord User Settings then Voice and Video selects which physical microphone Discord uses as the audio source. Always verify this is set to the correct device before a voice call. The Default option follows your operating system's default recording device which can change unexpectedly when new USB audio devices are connected. Use this free online mic test alongside this setting: open the test, select your desired mic, confirm it works, then set the same device explicitly in Discord to avoid Discord switching devices automatically.
Input Volume in Discord controls a software amplification applied to your microphone signal inside Discord. At 100 percent it passes the raw OS microphone level to Discord's processing chain. Values above 100 percent are not available in standard Discord; instead use OS-level microphone boost for additional gain. Set Input Volume to 100 percent and adjust your level using the OS microphone volume first, then use this free mic test to verify your level is between -30 and -10 dBFS. Only lower Input Volume below 100 in Discord if your mic reads consistently above -6 dBFS even after reducing the OS volume.
Input Sensitivity controls Discord's Voice Activity Detection gate: the threshold below which your microphone signal is treated as silence and not transmitted to others. When Automatically Determine Input Sensitivity is enabled, Discord continuously adjusts this threshold based on your background noise level. Disable automatic mode when your voice is being cut off mid-sentence: the green speaking indicator on your Discord avatar is a reliable indicator of when the gate is open. Use this free Discord mic test alongside Discord's own speaking indicator to calibrate the manual sensitivity slider to a level that activates consistently when you speak normally.
Echo Cancellation in Discord User Settings then Voice and Video then Advanced uses acoustic echo cancellation algorithms to remove feedback caused by your microphone hearing your own speaker output. It should always be enabled unless you are using a professional audio interface with hardware-level loopback control. Echo cancellation works by creating a model of your speaker output and subtracting it from the microphone input in real time. Disabling it is only appropriate when using professional recording software that applies its own echo cancellation at the interface level, which would cause double-processing artifacts if Discord's cancellation is also active.
Noise Suppression in Discord's Advanced voice settings uses Krisp AI noise suppression to remove non-voice sounds from your microphone feed. Standard mode reduces consistent background noise like fans and HVAC. Krisp mode uses a deeper neural network model that can suppress more complex noise including keyboard typing, mouse clicks, paper rustling and crowd noise. Krisp mode is available on Discord Nitro subscriptions. Both modes use your CPU to process audio in real time. On lower-powered computers, high CPU usage from Krisp can cause audio glitches: in this case standard noise suppression is the better option. The noise floor reading on this free Discord mic test will be noticeably lower when noise suppression is active and working correctly.
Automatic Gain Control (AGC) in Discord's Advanced voice settings automatically adjusts the amplification of your microphone signal to maintain a consistent average output level. When AGC is on, Discord boosts your level when you speak quietly and reduces it when you speak loudly. For most users this produces a more consistent listening experience for teammates. However AGC can cause problems with music, gaming sounds or any audio that has intentional dynamic range: it will compress these sounds in a way that sounds unnatural. AGC also interacts with the Input Sensitivity gate in ways that can cause the gate to behave unpredictably. Test with AGC both on and off using this free online Discord mic test to hear the difference in your microphone behaviour.
High Fidelity Mode is available in Discord for server channels with sufficient Nitro Boost level. When enabled it disables all of Discord's audio processing including echo cancellation, noise suppression and AGC and transmits your microphone signal at up to 384 kbps stereo quality. This is designed for music performance, DJ streaming and professional audio applications where the source material already has professional processing applied. Do not use High Fidelity Mode for standard voice communication as it will transmit all background noise and echo without suppression. This free Discord mic test helps you confirm your audio quality before enabling High Fidelity Mode so you know exactly what your teammates will hear.
Discord's Voice Processing settings include Noise Reduction, Echo Cancellation and AGC individually toggleable along with Audio Subsystem which can be set to Standard or Legacy. The Standard audio subsystem uses Discord's newest audio stack which provides better integration with modern sound drivers on Windows 10 and 11. The Legacy subsystem uses an older processing chain that can resolve compatibility issues with specific USB audio interfaces and virtual audio devices such as VoiceMeeter, Virtual Audio Cable and other routing software. If your microphone shows correct level on this free Discord mic test but sounds distorted inside Discord specifically, switching the Audio Subsystem from Standard to Legacy or vice versa often resolves the issue.
Real reasons Discord users use this free online mic test before every gaming session and server event.
Before joining a competitive team voice channel in Discord for games like Valorant, CS2, League of Legends, Apex Legends or any other competitive title, use this free online Discord mic test to verify your microphone is at the correct level and has no background noise or distortion. Clear communication is a competitive advantage and teammates will perform better when they can hear callouts and strategies clearly without needing to ask for repeats. The Discord Voice Channel Simulator on this page shows exactly how you will sound to your team before you even join the call.
Before hosting or joining a Discord stage channel event, community Q&A, podcast recording, educational webinar or any structured Discord event with multiple listeners, use this free mic test to verify your audio quality. A poorly set up microphone during a large server event affects the experience for every listener simultaneously. Check that your level is consistently in the optimal range, noise suppression is working correctly and you have no clipping issues that would distort your voice during peaks of enthusiasm or emphasis.
Any time you change your microphone, headset, audio interface, USB hub, computer or operating system version, use this free online Discord mic test to re-verify your audio setup. Hardware changes often reset microphone levels in the operating system, change the default audio device, or introduce new driver-level processing that affects the signal chain. The level history graph on this tool shows whether your new setup delivers a consistent signal level over time or has stability issues that need addressing before you rely on it for Discord communication.
When a Discord teammate tells you that your microphone sounds bad, quiet, echo-y or distorted, use this free mic test as the first step in diagnosing the problem. The waveform shows signal integrity, the noise floor measurement shows background noise levels, the clipping counter shows whether distortion is present and the dBFS meter shows whether your level is correctly set. This gives you objective data to work with rather than subjective descriptions, making it much faster to identify and fix the specific problem that is affecting your Discord audio quality.
If you are considering purchasing a new microphone for Discord use, use this free online Discord mic test to compare multiple microphones side by side before making a decision. Test each microphone's noise floor, frequency response as shown in the spectrum analyzer, dynamic range and level consistency. Microphones that appear similar in price and specification can have significantly different performance characteristics that are clearly visible in the waveform and frequency spectrum provided by this free mic test tool, helping you make an informed purchasing decision without needing expensive recording software.
Intermittent microphone issues that only appear occasionally are particularly hard to diagnose inside Discord because the problem may have resolved by the time you or a teammate notices it. Use the level history graph on this free Discord mic test during an extended test session while you reproduce the conditions under which the problem appears. Sudden drops to silence, unexpected level spikes or recurring noise patterns that appear in the history graph at regular intervals often reveal the root cause: USB power management, wireless headset interference, cable contact issues or operating system background processes causing audio engine interruptions.
Everything about this free online Discord mic test. No registration or download required.
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