Acoustic Panels

Use panels for echo and clarity, not for blocking noise.

Panels improve the sound inside your room: clearer speech, tighter stereo image, less flutter, and fewer harsh reflections. They do not stop neighbour noise, and they do not fix deep bass by themselves.

Start by checking whether panels solve the sound you hear. Then choose the amount, placement, room guide, product, and install method only after the plan is clear.

Stage 1 — Sound check

First, find out if acoustic panels is what you need

Acoustic panels help when the room itself sounds echoey, hollow, or splashy. If the problem is noise getting in or out, start with soundproofing instead.

Inside the room or through the wall — which problem is yours? Two side-by-side scenes. On the left, a small sound source in the centre of a single room with many short arrows scattered across the entire space pointing in many different directions — some shooting outward from the source, others bouncing back inward from every wall, others travelling sideways through the room as the sound bounces around chaotically — the job of acoustic panels. On the right, horizontal sound waves travelling rightward in one room toward a shared wall, then continuing into the next room as the same wave shapes drawn with very short dotted segments to show they have been weakened — the job of soundproofing. IS THE PROBLEM INSIDE THE ROOM, OR FROM OUTSIDE? echoes bouncing inside one room ACOUSTIC PANELS noise leaking from another room SOUNDPROOFING
Speech clarity Voice sounds hollow, far away, or hard to follow That usually means sound is bouncing around inside the room. Panels can make speech clearer.
Ring / echo A clap rings after your hands stop Bare walls, ceilings, floors, and glass are throwing sound back at you. Panels calm the room.
Splashy sound Music, dialogue, or recordings feel splashy The room is adding extra reflections around the source or mic. Panels cut down those extra reflections.
Sound transfer Neighbour noise, traffic, footsteps, or sound escaping That sound is crossing a wall, floor, ceiling, door, or window. Start with soundproofing.
Bass buildup Boomy bass, corner rumble, one-note low end Low end needs deeper corner treatment. Check bass traps before adding more wall panels.
Stage 2 — Panel job

Acoustic panels confirmed. Now define what to fix.

Before buying anything, know exactly what you need acoustic panels to fix. Fixing for: clearer speech, less ring, cleaner recordings, or a tighter listening position — each one leads to a slightly different panel plan.

  1. 01

    What problem are you facing?

    Use the thing you actually hear as the brief: hollow voice, clap ring, harsh reflections, or splashy recordings. Panels should solve a specific room problem, not just cover empty wall.

    Read: Do acoustic panels work? · Panels and sound blocking

  2. 02

    What kind of room are you trying to acoustically treat?

    A bedroom office needs comfort and speech clarity. A podcast desk, studio, or theatre needs tighter control around the mic, speakers, or listening seat.

    Read: Home office · Home theatre · Bedroom · Apartment · Music room · Streaming · Gaming · Drums · Garage · Gym · Church · Concert hall

  3. 03

    What kind of acoustic panels do you need?

    Once panels are the right fix, the next mistake is buying thin decorative pieces. Start with core, thickness, rating, and fabric before counting how many you need.

    Read: Best panel material · NRC rating explained

  4. 04

    How many acoustic panels do you need?

    Room size and how much absorption you need both shape the number. Too few panels barely help; too many can deaden the room.

    Read: How many panels · Panel cost guide

  5. 05

    Where should you place them?

    First-reflection points, the wall behind the speakers, and the ceiling above the listening position usually matter most. Get those right before filling every wall.

    Read: Panel placement · Panel spacing

  6. 06

    What else might your room need?

    Panels absorb mid and high frequencies, but they will not fix boomy bass or a room that feels too dead. Bass traps handle low-end buildup in corners, and sound diffusers scatter reflections so the room stays lively without echo.

Stage 4 — Quantity

Stop guessing. Calculate how many panels you need.

Most rooms only need a simple calculation: how big is the room, how much wall space should you cover, and what size panels are you using. Read the guide to understand the logic, then use the calculator below to get your number in seconds.

Room-size math Panel count calculator Enter the room. See the count.

Quick Panel Calculator

Get a fast estimate for your room

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Stage 5 — Placement

Know where to place your panels

Placement is where panels start working. Find the first reflections, keep the room balanced, and use the planner before drilling holes.

Room surfaces that commonly need acoustic panel placement. A room shell with numbered markers for side walls, front corners, the ceiling above the listener or microphone, and the wall behind the sound source. 1 1 2 2 3 4

Where panels usually start working first

Stage 6 — Panel picks

Choose panels for the room you are treating.

Different rooms need different panels. Pick the room or use case closest to yours, then compare the panel shortlists, budget trade-offs, and placement priorities that match that setup.

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