What is a white noise machine and can it really help you sleep better?

How a white noise machine could help you to switch off and get a more restful night

A woman sleeping with a white noise machine by her bed
(Image credit: Pexels / Miriam Alonso / Homedics)

Modern life can be counterproductive for sleep. Even if you can successfully cast aside the stresses and strains of daily life, often you'll find yourself up against noisy traffic, barking dogs or upstairs neighbours as you try to get some shut-eye.

Noise pollution, in all its many guises, can have a significant impact on the quality of your sleep. While you can always try and get the basics right, like buying the best mattress and the best pillow, sometimes you need a little extra help. 

Increasingly, white noise machines are helping people to overcome noise pollution, as Christina Graham, sleep specialist and coach for Noom (opens in new tab), explains. "Abrupt noise changes within our environment can make it harder to fall asleep and stay asleep," she says. "Introducing a consistent sound from a white noise machine or app can help to mask those abrupt changes, decrease awakenings, and promote more restful sleep."

What is a white noise machine? 

Avantek white noise machine

(Image credit: Avantek)

Just as white light features all of the colour wavelengths in the spectrum so that they appear white when they are looked at together, white noise combines every frequency on the acoustic spectrum. Together, they can fuse to override smaller sounds, irrespective of their particular frequency. 

White noise machines create sound, often likened to the static from an untuned radio, to blot out all those peripheral sounds that may serve to disrupt your sleep. They come in a variety of guises, from stand-alone machines to Avantek's travel-size one, and an increasing number of apps offer white noise as well. 

How does a white noise machine work? 

White noise machines work through sound or noise masking, a process that creates a blanket of sound that helps to eliminate all those irritating other sounds that might ordinarily keep you awake. Most will feature a range of sounds to choose from, but will also offer options for 'pink' noise, which has lower frequencies, and 'brown' noise, which is even lower still.

"Pink noise that mimics sounds such as rain and wind has less higher frequencies than white noise and is said to increase deep sleep," says Kate Mikhail, journalist and author of Teach Yourself to Sleep: An Ex-Insomniac's Guide (opens in new tab). "This might be useful for shift workers trying to sleep during the day."

Most white noise machines will either create a white noise mechanically or play a digital white noise recording. While sound quality is important, it's key that the device has a timer facility so you know it will turn itself off once you're asleep and so that you can control the volume. Keep it at a sensible level too. Forty-six decibels should be sufficient, but make sure you don't exceed 85 decibels as that can disturb your sleep and possibly impact your hearing.

Can white noise help you to sleep better? 

A woman asleep under a duvet

(Image credit: Pexels / Karolina Grabowska)

There is a wide range of evidence to suggest that white noise machines might be beneficial in addressing some common sleep problems. A 2017 study in Frontiers in Neurology (opens in new tab) found that adults fell asleep 38% faster when using white noise, while another published in Sleep Medicine (opens in new tab) showed that the introduction of white noise machines in intensive care units helped patients to sleep more soundly. Another study (opens in new tab) revealed that 80% of respondents slept better than those who weren't exposed to it, and it's also thought that white noise may help mothers in settling babies who are struggling to sleep.

But not all experts agree. In 2020, Mathias Basner, a professor of psychiatry at the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine in Philadelphia, reviewed 38 studies (opens in new tab) that had looked at using noise as a sleep aid. He found that while some evidence existed that white noise machines could help people to fall asleep faster than normal, not all of the evidence stood up to academic scrutiny. 

"He found that 'the quality of evidence for continuous noise improving sleep was very low'," says Mikhail. "There was also some concern that continuous noise in the bedroom might actually disrupt sleep."

Users also need to be realistic about what they can expect to achieve, especially if your sleeping issues are long-standing problems that may require more specialist interventions. "I would add that noise machines, or other sleep gadgets for that matter, are not a silver bullet for all sleep issues," says Mikhail. "It's essential that we look at what is disrupting our sleep, whether that's a racing mind, the inability to switch off at night, or a misaligned circadian rhythm, for example, and then address that."

Read our tips on how to practise good sleep hygiene if you're struggling to get those quality Zzzs.