Hearing Test

How well do you hear
for your age?

Hearing Test

How well do you hear
for your age?

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Do you often find yourself struggling to follow conversations?

In noisy environments, you only catch fragments of conversations and end up nodding along. Your family says the TV is too loud, but you still don't hear all the details. You find yourself asking people to repeat themselves more and more often or you avoid large groups altogether.

Most people hear worse than they think.

Alarming fact: More than 48 million Americans hear so poorly that their quality of life significantly suffers as a result.

Did you know that over 65% of people over 60 live with some level of hearing loss?1

By age 60, fully intact hearing is the exception, not the norm. Checking your hearing and treating hearing loss early can prevent it from getting worse. And when you can follow conversations easily, you’re more likely to stay active, connected, and involved—the key to a happier, healthier life.

Test Your Hearing Now

Get results in just 3 minutes!

  • No headphones needed
  • Clinically backed
  • Convenient at home test
  • Instant results
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Join 540,000 happy customers who trust hear.com

Over 540,000 wearers can’t be wrong. Here’s what they have to say:

Great product, great service

This is my first experience with hearing aids and I have to say that with hear.com it has been a breeze

Jeanne DiPrima, US 🇺🇸 | Verified Buyer

I am amazed at how well I hear now

The audiologist was great, and the whole experience was simple. I wish I hadn’t waited so long to get hearing aids!

Ernest Hiscox, US 🇺🇸 | Verified Buyer

A company that cares

I found the level of care to be exceptional. I am hearing so much more clearly.

Bill Ditto, US 🇺🇸 | Verified Buyer

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1 Based on calculations performed by NIDCD Epidemiology, Statistics, and Population Sciences Section staff: (1) using data from the 2015-2020 National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES); (2) applying the definition of disabling hearing loss used by the 2010 Global Burden of Disease Expert Hearing Loss Team (hearing loss of 35 decibels or more in the better ear, the level at which adults could generally benefit from hearing aids). https://www.nidcd.nih.gov/health/statistics/quick-statistics-hearing#6

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