Binaural Beats: What They Are, What Studies Suggest, and What Remains Uncertain
A genuinely interesting auditory phenomenon with promising-but-mixed evidence — here's an honest map of it.
What a binaural beat actually is
Play a 200 Hz tone into your left ear and a 210 Hz tone into your right, and you won’t hear two tones — you’ll perceive a single tone that pulses, or “beats,” about 10 times per second. That perceived 10 Hz pulse is the binaural beat. It is created inside the auditory system, not in the air, which is why headphones are required: through speakers, both ears hear both tones and the illusion collapses into an ordinary acoustic beat.
The intrigue comes from the numbers: 10 Hz sits in the alpha range of EEG activity, associated with relaxed wakefulness. The hypothesis — around since the 1970s — is that listening to a beat frequency might nudge brain activity toward that range (“entrainment”) and, with it, the associated mental state.
What studies suggest
- A 2019 meta-analysis pooling controlled studies found a small-to-moderate overall effect on anxiety, attention, and pain perception — but with substantial variation between studies.
- A 2023 systematic review of EEG studies found inconsistent evidence for actual brainwave entrainment: some studies detect frequency-following responses, others don’t, and protocols differ wildly (carrier tones, beat frequencies, session lengths, masking sounds).
- Relaxation and subjective calm are the most commonly reported benefits; effects on memory and attention are the least consistent.
What remains uncertain
The honest summary: something happens for some people under some protocols, and the mechanism is unclear. Expectation effects are hard to rule out — a slow, pulsing tone you sit down and breathe with is already a relaxation ritual. That doesn’t make the benefit fake; it makes the label “binaural beat effect” less certain.
Practical takeaway
If you’re curious, try it — the risk at comfortable volume is low and the cost is zero. Use our binaural beat tool, wear actual stereo headphones, start with the alpha-range preset for 5–10 minutes, and judge by your own experience rather than by anyone’s marketing. Skip it while driving, and don’t use it in place of care for a diagnosed condition.