Drifting Thresholds

Sound for Sleep

Brown Noise for Sleep

Deeper and softer than white, weighted to the low end. A favourite for ADHD focus. Built for falling asleep. Around 68,400 people a month search for this.

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What is Brown Noise?

Brown noise (also called red noise) rolls off the high frequencies and weights its energy to the low end, giving a deeper, softer rumble like distant surf or heavy rain. Many people, especially those with ADHD, find that low-frequency emphasis less fatiguing than white noise over long sessions.

Why brown noise for sleep?

Brown Noise suits sleep by giving the brain a single, unchanging thing to rest against while you settle into falling asleep. For sleep, pink noise and rain are the gentlest maskers; delta-range tones are designed as a deeper sleep aid played quietly through the night.

Falling asleep is a threshold you cross more easily when the sound around you stops changing. Steady noise masks the creaks and traffic that jolt a settling brain back awake, and slow delta-range tones nudge you toward deeper stages. These tracks run for hours so nothing restarts.

How to use brown noise for sleep

Play it quietly, on a speaker rather than headphones, and let it run for the whole night rather than a short timer, so a gap in the sound does not wake you. Keep the volume low: enough to mask sudden noises, not enough to notice once you are settled.

What does the research say?

Brown noise has little clinical research of its own; its recent popularity for focus and ADHD is largely anecdotal. The nearest evidence is the research on white noise and attention, since brown noise shares the same masking mechanism with a lower-frequency emphasis. We flag this honestly rather than overstate the case.

Sources: Söderlund et al. (2007), Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry

Gear that helps

For sleep, pink noise and rain are the gentlest maskers; delta-range tones are designed as a deeper sleep aid played quietly through the night.

Disclosure: As an Amazon Associate, Drifting Thresholds earns from qualifying purchases. Product links may pay us a small commission at no extra cost to you. We only list things that fit the use case.

Sony WH-1000XM5

Audio · approx £350

Best-in-class active noise cancelling — silence the room before the sound goes in.

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Bose QuietComfort 45

Audio · approx £280

Trusted, comfortable ANC for long focus sessions.

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Beyerdynamic DT 990 Pro

Audio · approx £150

Open-back studio standard — wide stereo image for binaural beats.

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Meze 99 Classics

Audio · approx £280

Warm, beautiful walnut build for relaxed listening.

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BenQ ScreenBar Halo

Light · approx £180

Bias lighting that cuts screen glare during deep work.

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Philips SmartSleep Wake-Up Light

Light · approx £150

Sunrise alarm to anchor a steadier sleep–wake rhythm.

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Common questions

Does brown noise actually help with sleep?

Brown noise (also called red noise) rolls off the high frequencies and weights its energy to the low end, giving a deeper, softer rumble like distant surf or heavy rain. Many people, especially those with ADHD, find that low-frequency emphasis less fatiguing than white noise over long sessions. Used for sleep, for sleep, pink noise and rain are the gentlest maskers; delta-range tones are designed as a deeper sleep aid played quietly through the night.

How should I use brown noise for sleep?

Play it quietly, on a speaker rather than headphones, and let it run for the whole night rather than a short timer, so a gap in the sound does not wake you. Keep the volume low: enough to mask sudden noises, not enough to notice once you are settled.

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