Skip to content


How To Design For (And With) Deaf People

“The loudness of sound is measured in units called decibels (dB). Everybody is on the spectrum of deafness, from normal hearing (up to 15 dB) to profound hearing loss (91+ dB):

  • Slight Hearing Loss, 16–25 dB
    At 16 dB hearing loss, a person can miss up to 10% of speech when a speaker is at a distance greater than 3 feet.
  • Mild hearing loss, 26–40 dB
    Soft sounds are hard to hear, including whispering, which is around 40 dB in volume. It’s more difficult to hear soft speech sounds spoken at a normal volume. At 40dB hearing loss, a person may miss 50% of meeting discussions.
  • Moderate hearing loss, 41–55 dB
    A person may hear almost no speech when another person is talking at normal volume. At a 50dB hearing loss, a person may not pick up to 80% of speech.
  • Moderately Severe Hearing Loss, 56–70 dB
    A person may have problems hearing the sounds of a dishwasher (60dB). At 70 dB, they might miss almost all speech.
  • Severe Hearing Loss, 71–90 dB
    A person will hear no speech when a person is talking at a normal level. They may hear only some very loud noises: vacuum (70 dB), blender (78 dB), hair dryer (90 dB).
  • Profound Hearing Loss, 91+ dB
    Hear no speech and at most very loud sounds such as a music player at full volume (100 dB), which would be damaging for people with normal hearing, or a car horn (110 dB).”

A chart showing sound frequencies and decibel levels, illustrating types of hearing loss and common everyday sounds.

  • Pro plugin deactivated or invalid

Posted on: February 2, 2026, 6:12 am Category: Uncategorized

0 Responses

Stay in touch with the conversation, subscribe to the RSS feed for comments on this post.