How to Measure Noise Levels Accurately

7 steps15-20 min readUpdated 2026-03-20

Quick Answer

Measuring noise levels accurately means using a calibrated sound level meter with appropriate frequency weighting and time constants to capture the sound pressure level at a defined position. Correct technique ensures your measurements meet IEC 61672-1 requirements and produce legally defensible, repeatable data.

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Equipment Needed

  • Sound level meter or calibrated measurement microphone (IEC 61672-1 Class 2 minimum)
  • Acoustic calibrator (94 dB or 114 dB at 1 kHz)
  • Windscreen for outdoor measurements
  • Tripod or microphone stand
  • SonaVyx SPL Meter tool (browser-based alternative)

Step-by-Step Guide

1

Calibrate the Measurement Device

Before every measurement session, calibrate your SPL meter or measurement microphone using a 94 dB or 114 dB acoustic calibrator. Place the calibrator over the microphone capsule and verify the reading matches the calibrator's stated level within plus or minus 0.3 dB. In SonaVyx, use the calibration feature under SPL Meter settings to apply the correction offset. Record the calibration level and any deviation in your measurement log. IEC 61672-1 Clause 5.4.3 requires field calibration verification.

2

Select Frequency Weighting

Choose A-weighting (dBA) for general environmental noise and occupational exposure assessments. A-weighting approximates human hearing sensitivity by attenuating low and very high frequencies. Use C-weighting (dBC) for peak level measurements and low-frequency dominant noise sources like music venues, industrial machinery, and HVAC systems. Z-weighting (unweighted, dBZ) captures the flat, linear sound pressure level and is useful for acoustic research. Most regulatory standards specify dBA for compliance.

3

Choose Time Weighting

Select Fast (125 ms time constant) for general noise measurement per IEC 61672-1. Use Slow (1000 ms) for fluctuating noise where you need a more stable reading. Impulse weighting (35 ms attack, 1500 ms decay) captures transient peaks from impacts, gunshots, or construction activities. For equivalent continuous level (Leq), the meter integrates all energy over the measurement period, producing a single representative number that accounts for both loud and quiet moments.

4

Position the Microphone

Mount the microphone on a tripod at 1.2 to 1.5 meters above the floor, representing ear height. Position at least 1 meter from any reflecting surface including walls, windows, and equipment. For environmental noise monitoring, place the mic 1.5 meters from the facade of affected buildings per ISO 1996-2. For workplace noise, measure at the worker's ear position during normal operations. Always orient the microphone according to the manufacturer's specification, typically with the diaphragm facing the dominant noise source.

5

Measure for Adequate Duration

The measurement duration depends on the noise type. For steady-state noise like HVAC, 15 to 30 seconds is sufficient. For fluctuating noise such as traffic, measure for at least 15 minutes to capture representative variation. For occupational noise dose assessment, OSHA requires a full-shift measurement of at least 7 hours. SonaVyx's SPL meter logs continuous data and calculates Leq, Lmax, Lmin, and statistical percentiles (L10, L50, L90) automatically.

6

Record Environmental Conditions

Document wind speed (use a windscreen if outdoors), temperature, humidity, and any intermittent noise events during the measurement. Note the date, time, measurement position coordinates, and any relevant operational conditions such as machinery running or HVAC status. These details are essential for regulatory reports and for comparing measurements taken at different times. SonaVyx allows you to add timestamped event notes during logging.

7

Analyze and Report Results

Review the measurement data including Leq over the full period, Lmax, Lmin, L90 (background noise level), and L10 (noise events level). Compare against applicable standards: WHO recommends Leq below 45 dBA for indoor residential areas at night. OSHA requires hearing protection when TWA exceeds 85 dBA. Export your data as CSV from SonaVyx for inclusion in compliance reports. Include calibration records and measurement uncertainty estimates.

Understanding Sound Level Metrics

Sound pressure level (SPL) is the fundamental quantity measured by sound level meters, expressed in decibels (dB) relative to the threshold of hearing at 20 micropascals. Because the decibel scale is logarithmic, a 10 dB increase represents a tenfold increase in sound energy, while a 3 dB increase represents a doubling. Understanding this relationship is critical for interpreting measurements and communicating results.

Frequency Weighting Networks

The human ear does not respond equally to all frequencies. A-weighting applies a filter that reduces the contribution of low frequencies below 500 Hz and very high frequencies above 6 kHz, approximating the 40-phon equal-loudness contour. C-weighting is nearly flat across the audio spectrum, attenuating only the extreme low and high ends. The difference between dBA and dBC readings at the same location indicates the amount of low-frequency energy present. A difference greater than 10 dB suggests significant low-frequency content that A-weighting alone may underestimate.

Statistical Noise Descriptors

For fluctuating noise, single-number metrics like Lmax or Lmin tell an incomplete story. Statistical descriptors based on the cumulative distribution of instantaneous levels provide more useful characterization. L90 represents the level exceeded 90 percent of the time, effectively the background noise level. L10 represents the level exceeded only 10 percent of the time, capturing noise events. L50 is the median level. These percentiles are essential for environmental noise assessments and community noise ordinances.

Measurement Uncertainty

All measurements carry uncertainty. IEC 61672-1 Class 2 instruments have a tolerance of plus or minus 1.4 dB at the calibration frequency and wider tolerances at frequency extremes. Environmental factors including wind, temperature gradients, and humidity affect sound propagation. Reporting measurement uncertainty, typically 1 to 3 dB for field measurements, is a professional best practice that strengthens the credibility of your results.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

Failing to calibrate before measurement, which can introduce errors of several dB from microphone drift and temperature changes

Holding the phone or meter too close to the body, which causes reflections and diffraction that alter the measured level by up to 6 dB at high frequencies

Using A-weighting for low-frequency dominant noise, which dramatically underestimates perceived loudness from bass-heavy sources

Measuring for too short a duration in fluctuating noise environments, producing an Leq that does not represent typical conditions

Ignoring wind noise outdoors, which can add 10 to 20 dB of false signal below 500 Hz without a proper windscreen

Applicable Standards

StandardClauseRelevance
IEC 61672-1:2013Clause 5Electroacoustical performance requirements for sound level meters
ISO 1996-1:2016Clause 5Basic quantities and assessment procedures for environmental noise
ANSI S1.4-2014Clause 4American national standard for sound level meters

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