Dimension scores are derived from public data and fields; weighted into the composite. Reference only.
TestMyAudio is a set of free online audio testing tools built for immediate use cases such as “I’m about to join a meeting, record something, or troubleshoot my devices.” In a single web page, it can test microphones, speakers, headphones, recording/playback, latency, ambient noise, and hearing frequency range, with no download, registration, or waiting queue required. The page clearly states that audio processing runs locally in the browser, and recordings exist only in the current tab and disappear once it is closed.
The feature set is fairly comprehensive: the microphone test shows waveform and level meters; the speaker test supports left/right channels, fixed frequencies, and a 20Hz-20kHz sweep; recording playback supports up to 10 seconds for end-to-end checking of the input and output chain; the latency test reports browser-side audio system latency; the decibel meter can be used for relative comparisons of room noise; and the hearing test covers 125Hz to 20kHz. Technically, it uses the Web Audio API, MediaRecorder API, and getUserMedia, and supports Chrome, Firefox, Safari, and Edge. It is implemented with HTML/CSS/JavaScript, with no framework or server-side audio processing described.
Pricing is very straightforward: it is completely free, with no account, no download, no hidden fees, and no payment step at all. The page also notes that the website funds hosting through standard analytics and advertising providers. The documentation is better than many similar small tools: in addition to an FAQ, it explains how to prepare before testing, what normal results look like, common issues, and the limitations of latency, decibel, and hearing range tests, helping non-technical users understand the results.
Its strengths are that it works instantly, has clear privacy boundaries, brings multiple tools into one place, and covers most everyday audio troubleshooting needs. It is useful for remote workers, students, streamers, podcasters, musicians, and headphone users. Its limitations are also clear: the decibel meter is not calibrated and should not be used for occupational safety or legal measurements; the hearing test is not a medical diagnosis; and latency values are affected by the system, drivers, and Bluetooth links, so they cannot replace professional testing. The page does not show information about open source availability, self-hosting, API/SDK access, or enterprise support.
It is suitable for individual users and content creators who need to quickly verify device status. It can also serve as a reference tool for developers debugging Web audio permissions and input/output chains, but it is not a development platform. The source text does not provide information about access from mainland China, so availability cannot be determined. If it is unavailable, alternatives include system sound settings, built-in audio tests in meeting software, a professional SPL sound level meter, or DAW/audio interface latency testing.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on testmyaudio.com official site.
testmyaudio.com is an Unknown Dev Tools provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 8.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of China direct-connect friendly. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach testmyaudio.com directly.