STC Rating Calculator
Sound Transmission Class (STC) is a single-number rating that indicates how well a wall, floor, or ceiling partition blocks airborne sound. SonaVyx calculates STC per ASTM E413 from 1/3 octave band transmission loss measurements, applying the 8 dB single deficiency rule and 32 dB total deficiency limit, and compares results against building code requirements for residential and commercial construction.
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Measure sound insulation in the field and calculate STC from your measurements.
Technical Specifications
| Parameter | Value | Standard |
|---|---|---|
| Standard | ASTM E413-22 | STC classification |
| Frequency Range | 125 Hz - 4 kHz (16 bands) | 1/3 octave bands |
| Reference Contour | ASTM E413 Table 1 | Shifted in 1 dB steps |
| Single Deficiency | 8 dB maximum below contour | At any single band |
| Total Deficiency | 32 dB maximum sum | Sum of all deficiencies |
| ISO 717-1 Rw | Also calculated | With C and Ctr terms |
| Building Codes | IBC, UBC, SBC, residential | Code compliance check |
How to Calculate STC
Enter Transmission Loss Data
Input the measured transmission loss (TL) values at each 1/3 octave band from 125 Hz to 4000 Hz (16 bands). These values come from laboratory testing per ASTM E90 or field testing per ASTM E336. Higher TL values mean better sound blocking.
Apply ASTM E413 Procedure
The calculator shifts the STC reference contour upward in 1 dB increments until two conditions are met: no single TL value falls more than 8 dB below the contour, and the total sum of all deficiencies (where TL is below the contour) does not exceed 32 dB.
Review the STC Rating
The STC value is the TL of the reference contour at 500 Hz after the final shift. The calculator also shows the deficiency at each frequency band, highlighting any bands that triggered the 8 dB single deficiency rule or contributed significantly to the 32 dB total.
Check Code Compliance
Compare the calculated STC against building code requirements. The International Building Code (IBC) requires STC 50 for party walls and floors between dwelling units. Many jurisdictions require STC 55 or higher. The calculator flags whether the partition meets common code thresholds.
Compare with ISO Rw
For international projects, the calculator also provides the ISO 717-1 weighted sound reduction index (Rw) with spectrum adaptation terms C (for pink noise) and Ctr (for traffic noise). Rw is approximately equal to STC for most constructions but can differ by 1-3 points.
Understanding Sound Transmission Class
Sound transmission through building partitions is one of the most common sources of noise complaints in residential and commercial construction. The STC rating system, standardized by ASTM E413, provides a consistent method for comparing the sound-blocking ability of different constructions. The higher the STC number, the better the partition blocks airborne sound. However, STC has important limitations: it covers only 125 Hz to 4000 Hz and does not adequately represent low-frequency performance.
The Mass Law
The mass law states that doubling the surface mass of a partition increases transmission loss by approximately 6 dB. For a single-leaf partition without structural resonances, TL increases at approximately 6 dB per octave with frequency. This means heavier walls block more sound, but the law of diminishing returns applies: each additional doubling of mass adds only 6 more dB, making extremely heavy constructions impractical.
Double-Leaf Construction
Double-leaf constructions (two separate leaves with an air gap) outperform single-leaf constructions of the same total mass by 10-15 dB or more. The air gap decouples the two leaves, preventing direct transmission. Adding absorption (mineral wool) in the cavity further improves performance by 5-8 dB. Resilient channels between the leaves and the structure add another 5-10 dB by reducing structural coupling.
STC Limitations and the Low-Frequency Problem
STC only covers frequencies from 125 Hz to 4000 Hz, yet many noise complaints involve bass from music, subwoofers, and traffic below 125 Hz. A wall with STC 55 may still transmit significant bass energy. The OITC (Outdoor-Indoor Transmission Class, per ASTM E1332) addresses this by including frequencies down to 80 Hz with a weighting that emphasizes low frequencies. For applications involving bass noise, consider OITC alongside STC.
STC Calculator Comparison
| Feature | SonaVyx | Smaart v9 | REW | OSM |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| STC calculation | Yes (ASTM E413) | No | No | No |
| ISO 717-1 Rw | Yes (with C, Ctr) | No | No | No |
| Deficiency analysis | Yes (per-band) | No | No | No |
| Code compliance | Yes (IBC, UBC) | No | No | No |
| Browser-based | Yes | No | No | No |
| Field test integration | Yes (measure + calculate) | Measure only | Measure only | Measure only |
| Price | Free | $898 | Free | Free |
Frequently Asked Questions
Related Tools & Resources
Standards References
- ASTM E413-22 — Classification for rating sound insulation (STC calculation procedure)
- ASTM E90-22 — Laboratory measurement of airborne sound transmission loss (lab TL measurement)
- ASTM E336-20 — Measurement of airborne sound attenuation between rooms in buildings (field FSTC)
- ISO 717-1:2020 — Rating of sound insulation: Airborne sound insulation (Rw, C, Ctr)
- IBC Section 1207 — Sound transmission requirements for dwelling units