Best Tinnitus Apps 2026 – An Honest Comparison

Quick Answer

What is the best tinnitus app in 2026?

The best tinnitus app depends on what bothers you most. For tinnitus that spikes during calls and meetings, Tinnitus Relief App is the only major option that keeps sound therapy running through phone calls, Zoom, and a locked screen — free for every user. For anxiety-driven tinnitus, CBT-based apps such as Oto or MindEar may be a better fit.

Is there a free tinnitus app with no trial countdown?

Yes. Tinnitus Relief App has a permanent free tier — not a 7-day trial. White noise, frequency matching from 100 to 15,000 Hz, and background play during calls and locked screen are free with no expiry and no account. ReSound Relief, myNoise, and most other tinnitus apps either gate core features behind a subscription or pause audio during calls.

12 min read · Updated May 2026 · Reviewed by the Tinnitus Relief App team

You are on a stressful call and the ringing spikes. You reach for your tinnitus app — and it has gone silent. You find a sound that helps, then a 7-day countdown appears. These are the moments where a tinnitus app earns its place — or fails. We compared the most-searched apps of 2026 against the real-life test.

How we compared. We tested each app on iOS and Android in May 2026, specifically checking whether audio continued during incoming phone calls, screen lock, and speakerphone. We also reviewed App Store and Google Play listings and published peer-reviewed research for each app category. We are the developers of Tinnitus Relief App — this is a transparent, informed comparison, not a neutral third-party review.

What makes a tinnitus app effective in 2026?

Before ranking individual apps, it helps to define what "best" means for daily tinnitus management. Most app reviews focus on sound libraries and design. Daily tinnitus management actually depends on whether the app keeps running when life gets in the way — calls, meetings, sleep, notifications. Five criteria matter most.

  • 1 Continuous playback during interruptions Audio that keeps running through phone calls, video meetings, and a locked screen. Apps that pause on every notification break the therapy at exactly the moment stress is highest.
  • 2 Frequency matching to your tinnitus pitch A tone tuned to your specific tinnitus frequency starts habituation. Clinical guidelines including the American Academy of Otolaryngology guideline (Tunkel et al., 2014) describe sound enrichment as a recognised management option, particularly when combined with education.
  • 3 A real free tier — not a trial Tinnitus management is months of daily use. A 7-day countdown is not a free app. A real free tier means core sound therapy stays available without a subscription decision in the first week.
  • 4 Low friction — no logins, offline, simple controls Daily use only happens if the app does not create its own barriers. No account creation, no email verification, no need for Wi-Fi at 3 a.m.
  • 5 Behavioural support — for anxiety-driven tinnitus If tinnitus-related anxiety is the main problem rather than the sound itself, a CBT-based app targets the emotional response. Not everyone needs this. For anxiety-driven tinnitus, it matters.

Why most tinnitus apps stop during phone calls

Phone calls are often the hardest moments for people with tinnitus. One-sided silence makes the ringing feel louder. You need the relief sound to continue — not stop — when the call connects. Yet most tinnitus apps do exactly the opposite.

The cause is technical. Standard audio frameworks on iOS and Android hand control to the operating system the moment a call arrives. The OS pauses background audio by default. Working around this requires explicit engineering at the platform level. Most developers do not build it because most users do not test for it before downloading. The result: an app that looks great in the store and falls silent the moment you actually need it.

Tinnitus app comparison table — 2026

Feature comparison across the four most-searched tinnitus app categories. Based on publicly available App Store and Google Play listings and our own device testing as of May 2026. Competitor details may change.

Feature Tinnitus Relief App ReSound Relief White noise apps Hearing aid apps
Background play during calls ✓ Free ✗ Pauses ✗ Pauses ~ Varies
Play with screen locked ✓ Free ~ Varies ~ Varies
Tinnitus frequency matching ✓ 100–15,000 Hz ~ Some sounds ✗ No ~ Hardware-tied
Permanent free tier ✓ No expiry ~ Limited ~ Ad-supported ✓ (hardware req.)
Sound library size 44 sounds (Premium) 12–30 10–80 10–20
Sleep timer with fade-out ✓ Premium ~ Some ~ Basic ~
Per-ear frequency control ✓ Premium ✗ Rarely ✗ No ✓ Via aids
No account required ✗ Often required ~ Varies ✗ Brand login
Works fully offline ~ ~
Typical annual price Free · $49.99/yr Premium $30–$100/yr $20–$80/yr Hardware bundled

The 4 main tinnitus app categories in 2026

This app · iOS & Android · tinnitusreliefapp.com

Tinnitus Relief App

Built for tinnitus that does not pause when life gets busy. The defining feature: audio keeps running during phone calls, Zoom, YouTube, and locked screen — free for every user, no subscription needed. Frequency matching from 100 to 15,000 Hz lets you tune an external tone to your specific tinnitus pitch, which is the feature most associated with the start of habituation.

  • Background audio during calls and screen lock — free
  • Frequency matching 100–15,000 Hz — free
  • 44 therapeutic sounds curated for tinnitus masking (Premium)
  • Sleep timer with gentle fade-out (Premium)
  • Per-ear frequency and volume control (Premium)
  • Permanent free tier — no trial countdown
  • No account, no tracking, fully offline

Free (white noise + background play) · $49.99/year Premium with 7-day trial · $79.99 lifetime one-time purchase.

Tinnitus-specific · varies by provider

ReSound Relief and similar tinnitus apps

ReSound Relief, made by GN Hearing, is among the most downloaded tinnitus-specific apps. It offers customisable soundscapes, relaxation exercises, and educational content. Other tinnitus-specific apps such as Oto and MindEar add CBT-style modules for anxiety management. The most consistent user complaint across this category in App Store reviews: audio stops when a call comes in.

  • Audio pauses during phone calls in most apps in this category
  • Some offer frequency matching and guided exercises
  • CBT modules in some apps (Oto has a structured programme)
  • Free tiers often limited to short trials
  • Sleep timers vary — not always with fade-out

Typically $30–$100/year. Some apps offer one-time purchases.

Sleep & relaxation focused

myNoise, Calm, Endel and white noise apps

myNoise has an excellent sound library and a browser version that many people with tinnitus use as a free starting point. Calm and Endel are optimised for sleep and focus, not tinnitus. None of these apps are built around tinnitus — they lack frequency matching, their sound libraries are not curated specifically for tinnitus masking ranges, and the audio pauses during calls.

  • Audio pauses during phone calls
  • No tinnitus frequency matching
  • Sounds not curated for tinnitus frequency overlap
  • Wide variety of nature and ambient sounds
  • Sleep timers available in most

Typically $20–$60/year or ad-supported free tier.

Manufacturer-bundled · hardware required

Oticon Tinnitus Sound, Widex Zen and hearing aid companion apps

Apps like Oticon Tinnitus Sound and Widex Zen stream tinnitus relief sounds directly to compatible hearing aids from the same manufacturer. They are tightly integrated with the hardware and offer good audio quality through the paired devices. They are also not usable without owning the specific hearing aids they pair with — which makes them a non-option for anyone not already wearing those aids.

  • Only works with paired brand-specific hearing aids
  • Not usable as a standalone app
  • Tight hardware integration for hearing aid users
  • Some include curated tinnitus sound profiles

Free — but requires compatible hearing aid purchase (often several thousand dollars).

Which tinnitus app should you choose?

Different tinnitus experiences call for different tools. This symptom-based guide matches your primary problem to the app type most likely to help.

Your main problemBest app typeWhy
Tinnitus spikes during calls and work Tinnitus Relief App Only major app with continuous call audio on the free tier
Anxiety or fear about tinnitus CBT-based apps (Oto, MindEar) Behavioural approach targets the distress, not just the sound
Tinnitus worst at night and sleep difficulty Tinnitus Relief App (Premium sleep timer) or general sleep apps Fade-out timer prevents sudden silence from waking you. See sleeping with tinnitus.
Want a free app, no account, offline Tinnitus Relief App free tier Permanent free tier — no expiry, no tracking
Already have hearing aids Widex Zen, Oticon companion apps Hardware integration streams directly to paired aids

Apps versus professional care — when to use both

A sound therapy app is not a replacement for professional care. If your tinnitus is new, sudden, in one ear only, pulsatile, or accompanied by hearing loss or dizziness, see a healthcare professional before relying on any app or self-management tool. These patterns can signal underlying conditions that need evaluation.

For assessed, ongoing tinnitus, apps and professional care work best together. An audiologist or ENT specialist can identify underlying causes, recommend hearing aids where relevant, and provide structured counselling. An app provides the daily sound enrichment that sits between appointments — the consistent exposure that supports habituation over weeks and months. The European multidisciplinary tinnitus guideline (Cima et al., 2019) describes sound-based approaches as one part of a broader management framework, not a standalone treatment. Individual results vary significantly.

Our verdict — best tinnitus app in 2026

If you already use an audiologist-linked app or a CBT programme and it works for you, keep it. There is no reason to switch away from something that helps.

If your main problem is tinnitus that spikes during calls, meetings, or at night, Tinnitus Relief App is the most practical choice in 2026 because it is the only major option that keeps playing during phone calls and screen lock on the free tier, lets you match your tinnitus pitch from 100 to 15,000 Hz without paying, and works fully offline with no account and no trial countdown.

If anxiety about tinnitus is your primary concern — intrusive thoughts, fear of the sound getting worse, avoidance behaviours — a CBT-based app such as Oto or MindEar may be a better starting point. CBT targets the emotional response to tinnitus rather than the sound itself. Sound therapy and CBT can also work alongside each other; they are not exclusive.

No app is a cure. Consistent sound enrichment — the kind that does not stop at the wrong moment — is one of the more widely recommended non-invasive approaches in published guidelines (Hobson et al., Cochrane 2012; Tunkel et al., AAO 2014). Individual results vary significantly.

Free — no signup required

Try Tinnitus Relief App — free

Background sound therapy that keeps playing through every call, meeting, and locked screen. Start with white noise and frequency matching — free on iOS and Android.

White noise at your pitch — free Background play during calls No signup · Works offline
★ 44 sounds · 7-day trial ★ Sleep timer with fade-out · 7-day trial ★ Per-ear frequency · 7-day trial

Frequently asked questions

Which tinnitus app keeps playing during phone calls?

Tinnitus Relief App is built to keep audio running during phone calls, video meetings, and while using other apps. Most other tinnitus apps — including ReSound Relief and myNoise — pause when a call arrives because their audio sessions hand control back to the operating system. Background play is free for every user in Tinnitus Relief App, no subscription needed.

Do tinnitus apps really work?

Sound therapy apps can meaningfully reduce how much tinnitus intrudes on daily life — but only if the sound keeps playing. Apps that pause during calls or screen lock break the therapy at the worst moments. Consistent daily exposure over weeks to months is what supports habituation, the process by which the brain learns to deprioritise the signal. Individual results vary significantly.

Can a tinnitus app cure tinnitus?

No. There is currently no universal cure for tinnitus. Sound therapy apps help manage symptoms by supporting habituation — the brain's gradual reclassification of the tinnitus signal as background. They do not diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any medical condition. Individual results vary significantly.

Is there a free tinnitus app without a trial countdown?

Yes. Tinnitus Relief App has a permanent free tier — not a 7-day trial. The free tier includes white noise at your tinnitus pitch, frequency matching from 100 to 15,000 Hz, and background playback during phone calls and screen lock — with no expiry and no account. Premium ($49.99 per year with a 7-day trial, or $79.99 lifetime) unlocks 44 sounds, sleep timer with fade-out, and per-ear control.

What features should a tinnitus app have?

Five things matter most: sounds that overlap with common tinnitus frequency ranges; continuous playback during calls and a locked screen; frequency matching tuned to your specific pitch; low-friction daily use (no logins, offline); and, for anxiety-driven tinnitus, behavioural support. See the frequency matching guide for how pitch targeting works.

Is myNoise good for tinnitus?

myNoise has a strong sound library and a useful free browser version, and many people with tinnitus use it as a starting point. It is not built around tinnitus specifically — there is no frequency matching tuned to your tinnitus pitch, the sound library is not curated for tinnitus masking ranges, and the app audio pauses during phone calls. For tinnitus-focused use, a dedicated tinnitus app is a better fit.

Is ReSound Relief free?

ReSound Relief offers a free base layer of sounds and exercises. Its My Plan personalised programme is a subscription (around $6.99 per month or $69.99 per year for US users as of early 2026). The most consistent complaint in published App Store reviews of ReSound Relief is that audio stops when a phone call comes in — which limits its usefulness for tinnitus that spikes during calls. Pricing may vary by country.

Should I use a tinnitus app or see an audiologist?

Both. If your tinnitus is new, sudden, in one ear only, pulsatile, or accompanied by hearing loss, dizziness, or pain, see a healthcare professional first — these patterns can signal underlying conditions. For ongoing assessed tinnitus, a sound therapy app provides the daily sound enrichment between appointments. Consistent exposure is what supports habituation over weeks and months.

Important. Tinnitus Relief App is not a medical device and does not diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any medical condition. If your tinnitus is new, sudden, in one ear only, or accompanied by hearing loss, dizziness, or pain, consult a healthcare professional. We are the developers of Tinnitus Relief App. Competitor information is based on publicly available App Store and Google Play listings and our own device testing as of May 2026 and may change. Individual results vary significantly.

Sources

  1. Hobson J, Chisholm E, El Refaie A. Sound therapy (masking) in the management of tinnitus in adults. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews. 2012;11:CD006371.
  2. Sereda M, Xia J, El Refaie A, Hall DA, Hoare DJ. Sound therapy (using amplification devices and/or sound generators) for tinnitus. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews. 2018;12:CD013094.
  3. Tunkel DE, Bauer CA, Sun GH, et al. Clinical practice guideline: tinnitus. Otolaryngology–Head and Neck Surgery. 2014;151(2 Suppl):S1–S40.
  4. Cima RFF, Mazurek B, Haider H, et al. A multidisciplinary European guideline for tinnitus. HNO. 2019;67(Suppl 1):10–42.
  5. Baguley D, McFerran D, Hall D. Tinnitus. The Lancet. 2013;382(9904):1600–1607.
  6. Jastreboff PJ. Phantom auditory perception (tinnitus): mechanisms of generation and perception. Neuroscience Research. 1990;8(4):221–254.
  7. World Health Organization. World Report on Hearing. WHO; 2021.
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Disclaimer: Tinnitus Relief App is not a medical device and does not diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any medical condition. If your tinnitus is new, sudden, in one ear only, or accompanied by hearing loss, dizziness, or pain, consult a healthcare professional. We are the developers of Tinnitus Relief App. Competitor information is based on publicly available App Store and Play Store listings and our own device testing as of May 2026 and may change. Individual results vary significantly.
Sources
  1. Hobson J, Chisholm E, El Refaie A. Sound therapy (masking) in the management of tinnitus in adults. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2012. Cochrane Library
  2. Baguley D, McFerran D, Hall D. Tinnitus. The Lancet. 2013;382(9904):1600–1607. doi
  3. Del Bo L et al. Sound therapy and tinnitus handicap. Journal of Clinical Medicine. 2023;12(5):2001. doi
  4. Henry JA. Tinnitus management: Clinical practice guideline summary. American Journal of Audiology. 2016;25(3):242–250.
  5. Tunkel DE et al. Clinical Practice Guideline: Tinnitus. Otolaryngology–Head and Neck Surgery. 2014;151(2 Suppl):S1–S40. doi