How to Test Your Speakers and Headphones

Check your speakers or headphones channel by channel: play left, right and both-side tones, run a frequency sweep, and find a dead or swapped channel.

Updated 5 min read By CodingEagles
Free tool Speaker Test Play left, right and both-channel tones to check your speakers. Open tool

To test your speakers, open a speaker test and play a tone in the left channel, then the right, then both. If sound comes from the matching side each time, your speakers work and are wired correctly. The free speaker test plays each channel on demand and runs a frequency sweep, all in your browser.

That is the short version. Here is how to use each part and read the result.

Why test each channel separately

Most audio faults are not “no sound at all”. They are subtler: one side is dead, the two sides are swapped, or the balance has crept over so far that it sounds like one speaker has failed. Playing both channels together hides all of these, because your ear fills in the gap. Testing left and right on their own is the only way to catch them.

How to test your speakers

Step 1: Select the right output

Make sure the device you want to test is the one your system is actually using. Plugging in headphones does not always switch the output, and a monitor or a Bluetooth speaker can quietly stay selected. Set the volume to a comfortable, modest level before you start.

Step 2: Play left, then right

Play the left-only tone. You should hear it from the left side alone. Do the same for the right. If a side is silent, or the sound comes from the wrong place, you have found a real problem rather than imagined one. Headphones worn the wrong way round are a common and harmless cause of a “swap”.

Step 3: Run the sweep

The frequency sweep rises from low to high over a few seconds. On capable speakers or headphones you should hear it climb smoothly with no gaps and no buzzing. A drop-out in the middle, or a rattle, usually means a damaged driver. Missing notes only at the very top or very bottom are normal on small built-in speakers.

Reading the results

  • One side silent. Try another cable or port first, since cables fail more often than speakers. If it follows the speaker, the driver or its wiring is the fault.
  • Channels swapped. Check the cable, the connector, and any left/right balance setting before blaming the hardware.
  • Buzzing or distortion. Lower the volume and listen again. Distortion only at high volume can mean the speaker is being pushed too hard; distortion at any volume points to damage.
  • Quiet on one side. This is usually a balance setting rather than a fault. Reset balance to centre and retest.

When it is the source, not the speakers

If both the left and right tones sound wrong in the same way, the problem may be upstream, in the output device, a balance setting, or an audio enhancement turned on in your system. Testing on a second device, like headphones plugged straight into a phone, quickly tells you whether the speakers or the computer is at fault.

Once playback is sorted, a microphone test confirms you can be heard as well as hear, which is the other half of any call.

Frequently asked questions

I hear the left tone from the right side. What does that mean?
Your channels are swapped, usually from a reversed cable, a wrong connector or a balance setting. Headphones can also simply be on the wrong way round. If the swap follows you across devices, the cable or adapter is the likely cause.
Why can't I hear the very low or very high tones?
Small laptop and phone speakers cannot reproduce deep bass or the highest treble, so missing tones at the extremes are normal for them. On full-size speakers or good headphones you should hear the whole sweep. A gap in the middle, or a buzz, points to a damaged driver.
Is it safe to run test tones at high volume?
Start low and raise the volume gradually. Test tones are continuous and can be harder on your ears and on small speakers than music at the same setting. You do not need high volume to tell whether a channel works.

Ready to try it?

Play left, right and both-channel tones to check your speakers. Free, in-browser, and 100% private — your data never leaves your device.

Open the Speaker Test