Test every microphone on your Android phone or tablet completely free online — no app download, no registration, no sign-up needed. Get a live waveform, real-time dB level, frequency reading, and instant pass/fail result for your Android mic in seconds.
Open this page in Chrome on your Android phone or tablet, press Start, allow microphone access, then speak into your Android's built-in mic. Get a live waveform, 32-band VU meter, 5 real-time metrics, and an instant pass/fail result — completely free online with no app download or registration required.
Modern Android phones have 2–4 built-in microphones positioned around the device. Each mic serves a different purpose — understanding them helps you test the right one for your needs.
Located on the bottom edge near the charging port, this is your primary Android microphone. It is used for phone calls, voice notes, WhatsApp, and video recording audio. It has the highest sensitivity for close-range voice capture and is the first to test when verifying call quality.
Located on the top edge of the phone, the secondary microphone works in tandem with the bottom mic using differential noise cancellation. It captures ambient noise which the phone's processor subtracts from the bottom mic signal, reducing background noise for the person you are calling.
Higher-end Android phones (Samsung Galaxy S-series, Google Pixel 8, OnePlus 12) include a rear microphone near the camera array. This mic is primarily used when recording video in rear camera mode to capture ambient sound from the scene being filmed without picking up finger-handling noise.
Android's audio subsystem (HAL — Hardware Abstraction Layer) automatically selects which microphone or combination of microphones to use based on the active use case: voice call, speaker mode, video recording, or external app. Android 11+ supports multi-microphone beam-forming natively via the AudioEffect framework.
All Android microphones use MEMS (Micro-Electro-Mechanical System) technology — microscopic vibrating diaphragms etched into silicon wafers. Android phone MEMS capsules typically measure 1–2 mm across, have a frequency response of 20 Hz – 20 kHz, and operate on 1.8V supplied by the phone's PMIC (Power Management IC).
When you speak into your Android mic, the signal passes through: MEMS capsule → ASIC amplifier → ADC conversion → DSP processor (Qualcomm Hexagon, MediaTek APU, or Google Tensor) → Android AudioFlinger → Application AudioRecord API → Web Audio API in Chrome. Our free online test accesses the final digital signal.
Three steps, under 30 seconds, completely free, no app, no registration — the fastest free online Android microphone test available for any Android device.
Open this page in Chrome for Android. Tap the orange Start button. Chrome will show a one-time microphone permission prompt — tap Allow. No app download, no registration, no sign-up. Android mic access is instant in Chrome.
Speak naturally as you would on a call or recording. Watch the live waveform animate, the VU meter bars light up, and all five metrics — dB, Hz, Peak, Sample Rate, Quality — update in real time directly in your Chrome browser. All processing is local on your Android device.
After 5 seconds, receive a Pass ✅ or Fail ❌ verdict for your Android microphone with a quality rating. Fail results include Android-specific troubleshooting steps — app permissions, OEM audio processing, mic blockage, hardware damage diagnosis.
Each Android manufacturer customises mic permissions, audio settings, and privacy controls differently. Find your brand below for exact steps to enable mic access before running the free online test.
Professional Android microphone diagnostics running entirely in Chrome on your Android device — completely free, online, no app, no registration, no server upload ever.
Real-time oscilloscope waveform renders at up to 60 FPS with a vivid orange glow, showing every detail of your Android microphone's signal character. Instantly reveals whether the mic is active, noisy, or producing a flat silent trace due to permission denial or hardware damage.
A professional 32-band VU meter visualises the frequency energy of your Android mic signal in real time — green for safe levels, yellow for hot, red for clipping. Provides a studio-quality visual reference for evaluating your Android microphone's frequency balance directly in Chrome.
Your Android microphone's volume is displayed live in decibels. The ideal Android call level is −30 to −12 dBFS during normal speech. Too quiet means others can't hear you on calls; too hot means you will sound distorted on WhatsApp, Teams, or phone calls.
FFT analysis shows the dominant frequency of your voice in Hertz. For Android calls, voice should peak between 100–300 Hz. High Hz readings (above 4000 Hz) while silent indicate fan or electrical interference — common in damaged or blocked Android microphones.
The Peak meter tracks the maximum dB reached during your Android test session. Helps identify if your phone's mic is briefly clipping during loud speech — a common cause of distorted WhatsApp voice notes or choppy call quality.
Detects the actual sample rate Chrome is receiving from your Android microphone — typically 44,100 Hz or 48,000 Hz. Confirms your Android audio subsystem is operating correctly. Unusual sample rates can indicate hardware issues or Android audio driver problems.
After 5 seconds of speech, receive a Pass or Fail verdict with Android-specific diagnostic messaging — identifying whether the failure is a permission issue, hardware damage, OEM audio suppression, mic blockage, or signal chain problem.
If your Android device exposes multiple audio inputs (front, rear, headset), switch between them in the device selector dropdown. Test each one individually to identify which Android microphone has an issue and which is working correctly.
All audio is processed by Chrome's JavaScript engine on your Android device. Not a single audio byte is transmitted to our servers. Verifiable: open Chrome DevTools (via Remote Debugging) → Network tab during test — zero audio upload requests appear.
Our free online Android mic test works with every Android manufacturer — from premium flagships to budget devices — as long as Chrome is installed and microphone permission is granted.
Galaxy S24/S23/S22 series, Galaxy A54/A34/A14, Galaxy Note series, Galaxy Z Fold/Flip. Samsung One UI may require extra permission steps — see Samsung guide above.
✓ Confirmed WorkingPixel 8/8 Pro/8a, Pixel 7/7 Pro/7a, Pixel 6/6a, Pixel 5/4. Stock Android with Tensor AI mic processing. Simplest permission flow of all Android brands.
✓ Confirmed WorkingOnePlus 12/11/10 Pro, OnePlus Nord series (CE4, N30, CE3). OxygenOS is close to stock Android — minimal extra permissions required.
✓ Confirmed WorkingXiaomi 14/13 series, Redmi Note 13/12 series, POCO X6/F5 series. MIUI requires additional steps — see Xiaomi guide above for MIUI optimisation settings.
⚠ Requires Extra StepsRealme GT/Narzo series, OPPO Find X7/Reno series. ColorOS and Realme UI have moderate permission requirements similar to Samsung One UI.
✓ Confirmed WorkingMoto G84/G54/G34, Edge 50 series, Razr+ 2024. Near-stock Android with minimal OEM customisation — permission setup is straightforward.
✓ Confirmed WorkingNot all Android browsers support the Web Audio API equally. Here is exactly which browser to use for the most accurate free online Android mic test results.
| Browser | Mic Access | Waveform | VU Meter | Sample Rate | Recommendation |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chrome for Android | ✓ Full | ✓ 60fps | ✓ 32-band | ✓ Detected | ★ Best Choice |
| Samsung Internet | ✓ Full | ~30fps | Partial | Limited | Use if no Chrome |
| Firefox Android | Partial | ~25fps | Partial | Not detected | Not Recommended |
| Opera for Android | ✓ Full | ✓ 50fps | ✓ 32-band | Limited | Acceptable |
| Brave Android | Shields OFF | ✓ 60fps | ✓ 32-band | ✓ Detected | Disable Shields |
| Edge for Android | ✓ Full | ✓ 60fps | ✓ 32-band | ✓ Detected | Good Alternative |
| Mi Browser (Xiaomi) | Often Blocked | Not Supported | Not Supported | Not Supported | Use Chrome Instead |
The most common Android microphone failures with step-by-step solutions — all free to apply, no app download or registration required.
Once your free online test runs on Android, here is exactly what the dB, Hz, and quality readings mean for call quality, WhatsApp voice notes, and video recording.
| dB Reading | Quality | What It Sounds Like on Calls | Fix Action |
|---|---|---|---|
| Above −6 dBFS | Clipping | Loud, harsh, distorted — unusable for calls or voice notes | Move mic further from source, lower device input |
| −12 to −6 dBFS | Hot | Very clear but may distort on loud sounds | Slight distance increase from mic |
| −30 to −12 dBFS | Ideal | Perfect clarity — ideal for WhatsApp, Teams, calls, recording | No action needed — optimal Android mic level |
| −50 to −30 dBFS | Weak | Quiet — callers say "I can barely hear you" | Check mic opening, remove case, speak closer |
| Below −60 dBFS | Silent | No audible voice on any call | Check permission, blockage, hardware damage |
After your free online Android mic test passes, apply these proven techniques to get the clearest possible audio from every Android microphone on your device.
From casual smartphone users to professionals relying on Android for communication, our free online test is built for everyone — no app, no registration required.
Anyone who uses their Android phone for regular calls and wants to verify mic quality after dropping the phone, water exposure, or a software update silently breaking audio.
Professionals using Android for Teams, Zoom, and Google Meet calls test their mic free online before joining important client or team video meetings from their phone.
TikTok, Instagram Reels, and YouTube Shorts creators verify their Android mic audio quality online before filming content to avoid silent or noisy videos after recording.
Students attending online classes, oral exams, or tutoring sessions via Android phone confirm their mic works before session start. No app, no registration — test from the class link browser.
Repair shops use our free online Android mic test as a quick post-repair verification tool — confirming the replacement mic is working before returning the phone to the customer.
Mobile podcasters and interview hosts using Android as a backup recorder check mic signal quality before recording via free online test — no app needed in the field.
Patients attending medical appointments via Android phone test their mic 60 seconds before a video consult to prevent a failed session due to a silent microphone.
Non-technical family members who just need a simple, free, no-registration way to confirm their Android phone mic works for WhatsApp calls with distant relatives.
Everything you need to know about testing your Android microphone free online — no registration required to read any answer.
All 100% free, all online, all working in Chrome on Android — no app download or registration required for any tool.
No app download. No registration. No account. Free online Android mic test in Chrome — instant results, audio stays on your device forever.
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