How to Test Headphone Left and Right Channels
Quick answer: To test headphone channels, play a tone through the left, then the right, and confirm each comes from the matching ear. A browser test does this in under a minute and reveals a dead side or swapped wiring.
Try it now: open the headphone test with your headphones on the correct ears.
How to run the test
Play the left channel — sound should come only from the left ear. Play the right — only the right. Then play both, which should sound centered and equally loud.
What the results mean
If a side is silent, see our guide on headphones working on one side. If left and right are reversed, the wiring or a software channel setting is swapped. If one side is just quieter, your balance is off-center.
Why test your headphones
A quick channel check catches problems before a call, a game, or when setting up new earbuds, and it works the same way as a stereo speaker test.
Confirm
On the headphone test, both sides should play their own tone and sound equal together.
What the Left/Right Channel Test Tells You
A channel test plays a tone in one ear at a time so you can confirm three things in seconds: that both sides work, that they're not reversed, and that the balance is even. Press Left and the sound should come only from your left ear; press Right and only from your right. If a side is silent, that earcup, the cable, or your balance setting has a problem. If the sound comes from the wrong ear, your channels are reversed — usually the headphones are worn the wrong way round, but occasionally the audio settings or a cable adapter have swapped them.
How to Read the Results
- Both sides clear and correct — your headphones and audio output are healthy.
- One side silent — check the balance slider, flex the cable near the plug, reseat the plug, and clean the earbud mesh. See our guide on headphones working on one side.
- Channels reversed — confirm L and R are on the correct ears; if they are, the swap is in your settings or an adapter.
- Faint on one side — almost always an off-centre balance or a worn driver.
Using the Balance Sweep
Beyond the simple left and right check, a smooth sweep from one side to the other is the best way to hear subtle imbalance. As the sound pans across, it should feel even and continuous, passing cleanly through the centre. If it sounds louder on one side as it crosses, or jumps rather than glides, you have a balance or driver issue that a simple on/off test can miss. This is especially useful when judging whether an old pair has started to fade on one side.
Why Test Before You Need Them
Headphones fail quietly — a cable frays, a driver weakens, a balance drifts — and you often don't notice until an important moment. Running this quick test on headphones you rely on for calls, gaming or music catches problems early, while there's still time to clean a jack, swap a cable, or claim a warranty. It also instantly settles the "is it my headphones or the app" question: if both channels pass here but something sounds wrong in a game or call, the fix is in that app, not the hardware.
Common Channel Problems and What They Mean
Each result on the test points to a specific cause. Both sides clear means your headphones and output are healthy. One side completely silent usually means a cable break near the plug, a partly inserted plug, or a dead driver — and if it's an earbud, a wax-clogged mesh. One side faint points to an off-centre balance or a gradually fading driver. Channels reversed (left tone in the right ear) means the headphones are on the wrong way round, or a setting or adapter has swapped them. Crackling as the tone plays on one side indicates a damaged cable making intermittent contact. Because the test drives each channel on its own, it removes the guesswork you'd face trying to judge balance from music, where instruments are deliberately panned.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I test the left and right channels of my headphones?
Open the headphone channel test, put your headphones on the correct ears, and press Left then Right. Each tone should play only in the matching ear. Use the balance sweep to hear the sound pan smoothly across both sides.
Why is the sound coming from the wrong ear?
Your channels are reversed. First check the headphones aren't worn the wrong way round. If L and R are on the correct ears and it's still swapped, the reversal is in your audio settings or a cable adapter.
What does it mean if one channel is quieter?
Usually an off-centre balance slider or a gradually worn driver on that side. Centre the balance in your sound settings first; if it's still faint, the driver is likely fading or the earbud mesh needs cleaning.
Does this test work for wireless headphones?
Yes. As long as the headphones are connected and selected as your audio output, the left/right channel test works exactly the same way as it does for wired ones.
Can I use this test to check surround or virtual surround?
It checks the core left and right channels, which is what stereo headphones use. Virtual surround is created by software processing those two channels, so confirming clean, correct left and right output is the right first step before testing any surround effect.
How often should I test my headphone channels?
Test whenever you notice a change, before important calls or gaming sessions, and periodically on headphones you rely on. Cables fray and drivers fade gradually, so an occasional check catches problems before they catch you at a bad moment.
Both sides sound fine but music feels off-balance — why?
The track itself may be mixed that way, or your balance slider is slightly off. This test isolates the hardware by driving each side equally, so if it passes evenly, the imbalance is in the music or the balance setting.
Does the headphone channel test work on a phone?
Yes. Open it in your phone's browser with the headphones connected and selected as output. The left and right tones and the balance sweep work the same as on a computer.
Why do I hear the left-only tone in both ears?
The mono audio accessibility setting is on, or the source is summing both channels. Turn off mono audio in your Accessibility settings so each channel plays independently, then run the test again.
What's the difference between channels and balance?
Channels are the left and right signals themselves; balance is how loudly each is played. Reversed channels means the signals are swapped, while off-balance means uneven loudness. This test reveals both at once.
Can I test earbuds and over-ear headphones the same way?
Yes. The left and right channel test works for any headphones — in-ear, on-ear or over-ear — as long as they're connected and selected as your audio output.
Test it now: Left/Right Audio Test · Headset Test