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Understanding Decibels: A Complete Guide to Sound Levels and Hearing Protection

NumberConvert Team4 min read

Learn what decibels mean, how loud is too loud, and how to protect your hearing from noise-induced hearing loss.

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What Are Decibels?

Decibels (dB) measure sound intensity on a logarithmic scale. This means every 10 dB increase represents a 10-fold increase in sound energy. The scale is necessary because human hearing spans an enormous range—from a whisper to a jet engine is a trillion-fold difference in sound energy.

Common Sound Levels

Sound SourceDecibels (dB)Safe Exposure Time
Breathing10 dBUnlimited
Whisper30 dBUnlimited
Normal conversation60 dBUnlimited
Vacuum cleaner70 dBUnlimited
City traffic80 dB8 hours
Lawn mower90 dB2 hours
Concert100-110 dB15 minutes
Sirens120 dBImmediate risk
Jet takeoff140 dBInstant damage
Gunshot160-170 dBInstant damage

How Loud Is Too Loud?

The Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) sets exposure limits:

  • 85 dB: Maximum for 8-hour exposure
  • 88 dB: Maximum 4 hours
  • 91 dB: Maximum 2 hours
  • 94 dB: Maximum 1 hour
  • 100 dB: Maximum 15 minutes
  • 110 dB: Maximum 1-2 minutes

For every 3 dB increase, the safe exposure time is cut in half. This is because 3 dB represents a doubling of sound energy.

The Logarithmic Nature of Decibels

Understanding the math helps appreciate why decibels work this way:

  • +3 dB = 2× sound energy (noticeable difference)
  • +10 dB = 10× sound energy (sounds twice as loud)
  • +20 dB = 100× sound energy
  • +30 dB = 1,000× sound energy

This is why two 60 dB sources together produce 63 dB, not 120 dB. Sound levels cannot be simply added—they combine logarithmically.

Noise-Induced Hearing Loss (NIHL)

Hearing damage from noise exposure is:

  • Cumulative: Damage adds up over your lifetime
  • Irreversible: Hair cells in the inner ear do not regenerate
  • Preventable: Hearing protection works

Early warning signs include:

  • Ringing in ears (tinnitus) after exposure
  • Muffled hearing after loud events
  • Difficulty understanding speech in noise
  • Asking people to repeat themselves

Hearing Protection Options

Protection TypeNoise Reduction (NRR)Best For
Foam earplugs25-33 dBConcerts, power tools
Silicone earplugs20-25 dBSwimming, sleeping
Earmuffs20-30 dBConstruction, shooting
Custom molded25-35 dBMusicians, industrial
Electronic protection20-30 dBHunting, shooting

The NRR (Noise Reduction Rating) indicates protection level, though real-world protection is typically about half the rated value due to imperfect fit.

Decibel Types Explained

Different dB measurements exist for different purposes:

  • dB SPL: Sound Pressure Level, the standard for environmental sound
  • dBA: A-weighted, filters sound like human hearing (used for regulations)
  • dBC: C-weighted, less filtering (measures peak sounds better)
  • dBm: Electrical power relative to 1 milliwatt
  • dBu/dBV: Voltage measurements in audio equipment

For hearing protection purposes, dBA is the most relevant as it matches human perception.

Special Situations

Concerts and Clubs

Live music regularly exceeds 100-110 dB. Musicians should always use protection—many professionals suffer hearing loss. Audience members should consider musician-grade earplugs that reduce volume without muffling the sound quality.

Headphones and Earbuds

The 60/60 rule: Listen at no more than 60% volume for no more than 60 minutes at a time. Many smartphones now include volume limiters and exposure warnings.

Work Environments

OSHA requires hearing protection programs for workers exposed to 85 dB averaged over 8 hours. This includes regular hearing tests and mandatory protection.

Converting Decibel Values

Use our decibel converter to:

  • Convert between dB and power/voltage ratios
  • Add decibel values correctly
  • Convert dB SPL to pressure in pascals

Key Takeaways

  1. Every 10 dB increase sounds twice as loud
  2. Exposure above 85 dB requires protection
  3. Hearing damage is cumulative and permanent
  4. Use the 60/60 rule for headphone listening
  5. Always carry earplugs to concerts and loud events

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