How to Measure Sound Isolation

7 steps15-20 min readUpdated 2026-03-20

Quick Answer

Measuring sound isolation means quantifying how much airborne sound is attenuated by a partition (wall, floor, or ceiling) between two rooms. The result, expressed as STC (Sound Transmission Class) per ASTM E413 or Rw (Weighted Sound Reduction Index) per ISO 717-1, tells architects, builders, and occupants whether the construction meets privacy, comfort, and code requirements.

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Equipment Needed

  • SonaVyx Sound Insulation measurement tool
  • Loudspeaker source (capable of 85+ dB SPL in source room)
  • Calibrated measurement microphone
  • SonaVyx SPL and RT60 measurement tools
  • Tape measure for partition area measurement
  • Pink noise generator (built into SonaVyx)

Step-by-Step Guide

1

Set Up Source Room

In the source room (the noisier side), place a loudspeaker capable of producing adequate level across the frequency range 100 Hz to 3150 Hz. Position it at least 0.5 meters from any surface and aim it toward the partition under test. The source should produce a minimum of 85 dB SPL in the source room to ensure adequate level difference above the background noise in the receiving room. Use broadband pink noise as the test signal. ISO 16283-1 allows multiple source positions for improved spatial averaging.

2

Measure Source Room Level

Using SonaVyx's SPL meter with 1/3 octave band analysis, measure the sound level in the source room at 5 or more microphone positions distributed throughout the room, at least 0.7 meters from any surface and 1 meter from the source. Average the 1/3 octave band levels across all positions to obtain the spatially averaged source level L1 per ISO 16283-1. The measurement captures the incident sound field impinging on the test partition.

3

Measure Receiving Room Level

Move to the receiving room (the quieter side of the partition). With the same pink noise playing in the source room, measure the sound level at 5 or more positions distributed throughout the receiving room, at least 0.7 meters from any surface and 1 meter from the test partition. Average the 1/3 octave band levels to obtain L2. The difference L1 minus L2 is the raw level difference D, but this does not account for the receiving room's absorption, which affects the result.

4

Measure Background Noise

Turn off the source and measure the background noise in the receiving room in 1/3 octave bands. If any 1/3 octave band in the receiving room measurement (L2) is less than 10 dB above the background noise, apply a correction per ISO 16283-1. If the difference is less than 6 dB, the measurement at that frequency band is invalid and cannot be used. Low background noise is essential for accurate isolation measurement. Request HVAC shutdown if necessary.

5

Measure Receiving Room RT60

Measure the reverberation time in the receiving room using SonaVyx's RT60 tool per ISO 3382-2. The RT60 is used to calculate the standardized level difference DnT, which normalizes the result to a reference reverberation time of 0.5 seconds: DnT = D + 10 log(T/T0), where T0 = 0.5 seconds. This normalization removes the influence of the receiving room's absorption on the isolation measurement, making results comparable between different installations of the same partition.

6

Calculate Sound Reduction Index

SonaVyx's Sound Insulation tool calculates the apparent sound reduction index R' from the field measurements: R' = L1 minus L2 + 10 log(S/A), where S is the partition area and A is the absorption area in the receiving room. The single-number ratings are then calculated per ISO 717-1 (Rw with spectrum adaptation terms C and Ctr) or ASTM E413 (STC). The Rw rating uses a reference curve shifting procedure that is handled automatically by SonaVyx.

7

Evaluate and Report

Compare the measured STC or Rw against building code requirements and design specifications. International Building Code (IBC) requires STC 50 for party walls in multi-family residential. European standards (EN 12354) typically require Rw 52 to 55 dB. If the measured value falls below the requirement, flanking paths (sound traveling around the partition through floor, ceiling, doors, outlets, or HVAC ducts) are the most common cause. Document all measurement positions, equipment, and conditions in the commissioning report.

Understanding Sound Isolation Metrics

Sound isolation between rooms depends on the partition's mass, stiffness, damping, and construction details, as well as flanking paths that bypass the partition entirely. Field measurements (ISO 16283) always produce lower ratings than laboratory measurements (ISO 10140) because field conditions include flanking transmission, construction imperfections, and boundary conditions that laboratories control. Expect field STC to be 3 to 8 points lower than the lab-rated value.

STC vs Rw

STC (Sound Transmission Class) per ASTM E413 and Rw (Weighted Sound Reduction Index) per ISO 717-1 are both single-number ratings for airborne sound isolation, but they use different calculation methods. STC uses a fixed reference contour and 8 dB single-band deficiency rule. Rw uses a different reference curve and no individual-band limit. For typical constructions, STC and Rw differ by 0 to 2 points. Rw additionally provides spectrum adaptation terms: C (for pink noise / living sounds) and Ctr (for traffic noise / low frequency), giving a more complete picture.

Common Flanking Paths

Flanking transmission through paths other than the test partition often limits the achievable isolation. Common flanking paths include: continuous floor slabs transmitting structure-borne sound, back-to-back electrical outlets creating direct air paths, HVAC ducts connecting rooms without duct silencers, doors with insufficient seals, and lightweight ceiling plenums that transmit airborne sound above the partition. Identifying and treating flanking paths often provides more cost-effective improvement than upgrading the primary partition.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

Measuring at too few positions, which does not represent the spatially averaged sound field in either room

Not correcting for background noise in the receiving room, which inflates the apparent isolation at high frequencies

Forgetting to measure receiving room RT60, preventing proper standardization of results

Reporting the raw level difference D instead of the standardized DnT or apparent R', which makes results incomparable

Measuring with doors open, gaps unsealed, or HVAC running, creating flanking paths that do not represent the partition performance

Applicable Standards

StandardClauseRelevance
ISO 16283-1:2014Clause 7Field measurement procedures for airborne sound insulation between rooms
ISO 717-1:2013Clause 4Evaluation of Rw from 1/3 octave band measurements and spectrum adaptation terms
ASTM E413-16Classification of STC from field or laboratory sound transmission data

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