Tinnitus is the perception of sound — ringing, buzzing, humming, or hissing — without an external source. It affects an estimated 10–15% of adults and is especially common after noise exposure, ear infections, or age-related hearing changes. Tinnitus itself is a symptom, not a disease. Identifying the underlying cause and using evidence-based coping strategies helps most people reduce its impact on sleep, concentration, and quality of life.
Common Causes of Tinnitus
- Noise-induced hearing loss — loud music, factory work, traffic, or firearm exposure without protection
- Age-related hearing loss — gradual sensorineural decline after 60
- Ear wax impaction — blockage that changes pressure and sound conduction in the canal
- Ear infections and eustachian tube dysfunction — middle ear fluid or pressure imbalance
- Medications — high-dose aspirin, certain antibiotics (aminoglycosides), loop diuretics, and some chemotherapy drugs
- Temporomandibular joint (TMJ) disorders — jaw clenching and grinding
- Stress and poor sleep — amplify perception of existing tinnitus rather than causing structural damage alone
- Cardiovascular factors — , atherosclerosis, and anaemia occasionally contribute
- Meniere’s disease — tinnitus with vertigo and fluctuating hearing loss
- Rare causes — acoustic neuroma, thyroid disorders, or head injury — require specialist evaluation
Home Relief Strategies With Evidence
Address treatable causes first
Before investing in long-term coping tools, rule out reversible triggers. Have impacted wax removed safely, treat active ear infections, review medications with your doctor, and manage if elevated. Many people notice significant improvement once the underlying problem resolves.
Sound therapy and masking
Adding low-level background sound — white noise, nature sounds, or a fan — reduces the contrast between tinnitus and silence, especially at night. Clinical trials support sound enrichment as part of tinnitus retraining therapy. Start with a free app or bedside speaker at a volume just below the tinnitus level, not loud enough to mask it completely.
Hearing protection and volume control
Further noise damage worsens tinnitus. Use earplugs at concerts, during power tool use, and in loud workplaces. Follow the 60/60 rule for headphones: no more than 60% volume for 60 minutes, then a break. This prevents additional cochlear injury.
Stress reduction and sleep hygiene
and heighten tinnitus awareness. Diaphragmatic breathing, progressive muscle relaxation, and consistent sleep schedules reduce perceived loudness over weeks. See our guide for structured methods. Avoid caffeine and alcohol near bedtime — both fragment sleep and intensify nighttime ringing.
Cognitive techniques
Tinnitus retraining and cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT) — available through audiologists and psychologists — teach you to change the emotional response to ringing. Home practice includes reframing: “The sound is annoying but not dangerous” and redirecting attention to a task. CBT for tinnitus has strong evidence for reducing distress even when the sound persists.
Clinical guidance from NIH[1] stresses matching home care to symptom severity and seeking urgent review when red-flag signs appear.
What Does Not Help — or May Harm
- Ear candles — no proven benefit; injury risk
- Unproven supplements marketed as “tinnitus cures” — evidence is weak for most
- Excessive silence — worsens awareness; gentle sound enrichment is better
- Ignoring sudden or one-sided tinnitus — delays diagnosis of treatable conditions
When to See a Doctor
- Tinnitus in only one ear — requires examination and often hearing tests
- Sudden onset or rapid worsening — especially with hearing loss or vertigo
- Pulsatile (heartbeat-synced) tinnitus
- Tinnitus after head injury or with neurological symptoms
- Ringing accompanied by ear pain, discharge, or
- Symptoms persisting beyond two weeks despite addressing wax, noise, and sleep
- Significant anxiety, , or sleep disruption from tinnitus
- Occupational noise exposure — arrange audiometry and workplace assessment
For verification and deeper reading, NHS[2] offers independent, evidence-based information you can cross-check with your own clinician.
Frequently Asked Questions
Will tinnitus go away on its own?
Transient tinnitus after loud noise exposure often resolves within 24–48 hours. Persistent tinnitus lasting more than a few days should be evaluated. Even when the sound remains, most people adapt and report reduced distress with proper management.
Can ear wax cause ringing?
Yes. Wax impaction is a common reversible cause. Safe softening and professional removal if needed may clear symptoms. See our guide for appropriate home methods.
Is tinnitus a sign of a brain tumour?
Brain tumours are a rare cause of tinnitus. One-sided tinnitus with asymmetric hearing loss warrants imaging, but the vast majority of cases relate to hearing loss, wax, or ear conditions — not tumours.
Do hearing aids help tinnitus?
For people with hearing loss, hearing aids often reduce tinnitus perception by restoring ambient sound input to the brain. An audiologist can assess whether aids are appropriate for your hearing profile.
Related Guides
- Ear Wax Removal — Safe Home Methods
- Ear Infection Home Care for Children
- Stress Management Techniques
References & further reading
Sources cited in this guide. DIMH links to independent medical institutions for verification — not as a substitute for personal medical advice.
- NIH — Eye healthhttps://www.nei.nih.gov/learn-about-eye-health
- NHS — Ear, nose and throathttps://www.nhs.uk/conditions/earache/
- Mayo Clinic — Eye carehttps://www.mayoclinic.org/departments-centers/ophthalmology/sections/overview/ovc-20462133
- NIH — Complementary and integrative healthhttps://www.nccih.nih.gov/
- MedlinePlus — Herbal medicinehttps://medlineplus.gov/herbalmedicine.html
- NIMH — Mental health informationhttps://www.nimh.nih.gov/health
When home care is not enough: chest pain, trouble breathing, confusion, or symptoms that worsen quickly need urgent medical attention.