Is Pink Noise (or White Noise) Safe for Babies?

By Rafael Farias · 5 min read · Updated 2026-05-24
Short answer

Noise can help infants fall asleep faster, but safety depends entirely on volume and distance. Older research and pediatric guidance warn that many sound machines can exceed safe limits for infant hearing at close range. Keep the device far from the crib, keep volume low, and treat it as an occasional aid, not an all-night necessity. This is not medical advice.

The honest framing

We deliberately do not market our sound to babies — but parents ask, so here is a straight answer. The question "is pink noise safe for babies?" has two parts that often get blurred: does it work, and is it safe? The work part has modest, dated evidence. The safety part is where the real, actionable science lives — and it is about volume, not color.

Does it help infants sleep?

The most-cited evidence is old: a 1990 study found that white noise induced sleep in about 80% of newborns within five minutes, versus 25% without it (Spencer et al. 1990). That is a striking number, but it is one small, decades-old study, and it does not establish long-term benefits or that noise is necessary for healthy infant sleep. Take it as a plausible short-term settling aid, nothing more.

The safety issue that actually matters

This is the part worth your attention. A study in Pediatrics tested infant sleep machines and found that many could produce sound pressure levels high enough to exceed recommended limits for nurseries — particularly at close range and high volume (Hugh et al. 2014). Infant hearing is the concern, and it is entirely within your control. The color of the noise is irrelevant to this risk; loudness and distance are everything.

The evidence, graded

Claim Evidence Best source
Noise can help infants fall asleep faster Older study: white noise induced sleep in ~80% of newborns within 5 min. Limited / dated Spencer 1990
Many sound machines can reach unsafe volumes Infant sleep machines can exceed recommended nursery sound limits, esp. close up. Documented Hugh 2014
A specific noise color is safer for babies Safety depends on loudness and distance, not color. Not established

Practical, cautious guidance

If you choose to use it: keep the machine as far from the crib as you reasonably can, set the volume low — not loud enough to mask a normal conversation — and use it to help settling rather than blasting it all night. Lower and farther is always the safer default. This is general information, not medical advice; your pediatrician's guidance on infant sleep and sound exposure takes precedence.

Common questions

Does white or pink noise help babies sleep?

It can help some infants fall asleep faster — an older study found white noise induced sleep in most newborns within minutes. The effect is real but the research is limited and old, so treat it as a possible aid, not a guarantee.

What is the real safety concern?

Volume and distance. A Pediatrics study found that many infant sound machines can produce sound levels high enough to exceed recommended limits for nurseries, especially up close. The risk is to hearing, not the noise color.

How should I use it safely?

Place the device as far from the crib as practical, keep the volume low (not loud enough to mask normal conversation), and use it for settling rather than running it loudly all night. When in doubt, lower and farther is safer.

Is pink noise safer than white noise for babies?

There is no evidence one color is safer than another for infants. Safety is about loudness and proximity, not the spectral color. Follow your pediatrician’s guidance.

Sources

  1. Spencer JAD et al. (1990). White noise and sleep induction. Archives of Disease in Childhood. doi:10.1136/adc.65.1.135
  2. Hugh SC et al. (2014). Infant Sleep Machines and Hazardous Sound Pressure Levels. Pediatrics. doi:10.1542/peds.2013-3617

This article is informational and not medical advice. Effects of sound are population-level and vary by individual.

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