Once the mic test is complete, you can leave a review about your microphone. This is not necessary, but we recommend that you do this to help others buy a good microphone and bypass the bad ones. Also, after your review is published, you will see how good your microphone is (i.e., you will find out how good it is in the best microphone rating).

To test the microphone, you only need a modern browser (unfortunately, Internet Explorer is not a such browser) that supports functions for accessing multimedia devices. As you have noticed, our microphone test tool does not require any additional software such as Adobe Flash, Microsoft Silverlight or browser plug-ins. There are no restrictions on the type of device, so your microphone can be integrated (into headphones, mobile device, laptop), wireless (WiFi, bluetooth) or connected via cord (USB, TRL, XLR).


Microphone Test Download


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Because the test results depend on various factors, it is impossible to guarantee an error-free algorithm. Nevertheless, we will constantly work on improving our testing tool and fixing the discovered errors. So if you find any errors or have any suggestions, please contact us at info@mictests.com.

Regardless of if you are having problems with Zoom or Skype, with recording something or with using Discord - the built-in microphone testing facilities provided by most of those services are far from perfect


Applications like Zoom and Skype are designed to communicate and they do their core jobs well, however, when they do not work troubleshooting them can be a nightmare.

The problem with carrying out a mic test on a piece of software which does not seem to be responding to the mic is, as you are already having issues, you cant be sure if the issue is software or mic related.

If you found out on this website that your microphone is working but it's still causing problems in some 3rd party piece of software, we suggest you submit a support ticket or get some extra help from the support team for that program.

In Sound settings, go to Input and under Test your microphone, look for the blue bar that rises and falls as you speak into your microphone. If the bar is moving, your microphone is working properly.

How do you quickly test if audio/sound is working properly in your computer? Pretty easy, just open an audio player and open a music file on it. Alternatively, run `speaker-test` from the alsa-utils package.

Now, I'm searching for an analogous way to do that for the microphone. My current way is not very efficient: I open audacity, tap the 'record' button, then speak until I see something different. While I speak, I try to tweak something on pavucontrol, alsamixer or on other programs.

The question is: under Arch, is there a better / faster / easier way to test if the microphone is working properly? I'm interested mostly on a binary answer: it is working / it is not working. No need to see the volume of the capture. A package, a program or a procedure would be highly appreciated.

PS1.: Audacity is not the best way also because it has several input sources; so I have to occasionally stop the recording, change the input source and then recording again, until I get the microphone working.

PS2.: Motivations for this post are because the built-in microphone of my laptop doesn't always work. I'm trying to troubleshoot this to (maybe) create a new post later on with useful info, but at the moment I'm just interested in a way to quickly test a microphone, not to configure one. Thanks.

I agree that a way to test microphones and speakers, preferably in their respective settings sections, would be great. Maybe even allow the user to just select a mic/speaker and then test it without saving/restarting rhasspy if that is possible with the current system.

Mic testing via audio input statistics: If you are not interested in how the mic sounds and just want to know if it works at all, there is an audio statistic button in the audio recording section of the settings. Just activate and look if it will turn out numbers, if so, it has some kind of sound, it might be just noise thought. If you speak or otherwise make sounds near the mic the numbers should reflect that, if they do, your mic is recording your environment. It might do so perfectly clear, or with lots of noise, this is not the way to tell but that is what the main gui is for.

I attached a microphone to my computer, and it was detected. It's all setup, now I want to test that it's actually working, and that it's working well. I tried sound recorder, but it didn't record any sound. I still think it's working though. What other ways can I test the microphone?

This will open a dialog box with four tabs. Make sure the second tab "Recording" is selected. There you should see your microphone, with a bar showing if it is receiving sound or not. You can also check its properties here.

Hi, i just got the Corsair H2100 7.1 Dolby Gaming Headset less than 12 hours ago. While on skype with few friends, they had very hard time hearing me and told me i was very quiet and sounded as if i was gagged. I tried changing some settings and recorded numerous samples of myself taking to try get the best possible microphone recording but nothing worked. I noticed i sounded very quiet and muffled, i compared my own recordings to those mic tests on youtube and indeed was very different. I used my old headset Steelseries siberia v2 to see if it was my computer's problem but that worked fine.

If you haven't already, you can download the software for the H2100 (v2.0.37) at -us/support/downloads. In there you should be able to adjust the volume levels. If that doesn't work, you can go into your windows sound options, and under recording devices>properties>levels you can adjust the headset microphone level.

I also have a game crash when using the microphone test on my system using Nova Pro Wireless headphones while SteelSeries GG Sonar is running for my voice chat mix. I do not have the crash if I disable SteelSeries GG. It might be helpful for troubleshooting to know that SteelSeries GG's mic format shows as 2 channel 48000hz format in windows.

I have right now tried mic test in the audio window, no crash. I've also tried testing the sound filters in the radios (this caused crash for me in the initial 2.9 release), no crash there. So far, so good

Inb4 check drivers or any pc setting: the mic works ingame through the mic test, so no problems there. We were on discord and on cod voice chat at the same time. I was being heard on discord but not in the ingame voice chat.

We have a range of HP EliteBook 840 G6 given to users and when they are using Teams inside Citrix with the inbuilt integrated microphone [specifically: Microphone Array (Intel Smart Sound Technology (Intel SST)] when making calls via Teams people are unable to hear them when they speak. They can hear fine and the webcam passes through as well,' in the Teams settings the microphone is listed as well.

I have tested this with 3 different users who have the same laptop, other models of laptops we have don't seemed to be affected, likewise if they were able to plug in a headset that also works, so it's just limited to that inbuilt microphone.

- Can you remove the Intel software and driver for the device. Let Windows pick up the generic one. 


Done this and it automatically picked it up each time, disconnected from Citrix each time and then reconnected when it got installed and fully closed/re-opened Teams each time as well (inside Citrix), also checked outside Citrix and was working both times

The second time I kicked off some Windows updates, again nothing relating to the microphone was on there and restarted the laptop; did the tests again, same sadly


The microphones are working correctly on other clients with Teams (HDX redirected) and if I connect a headset like Jabra Evolve 75 that microphone works correctly so it's not a general issue in the environment or the client but it's specifically that Teams HDX does not work with this microphone. It displays correctly as a device in Teams but no sound goes through.

Also if I in the Citrix session go to Start > Settings > System > Sound, I can see the soundbar "move" when I speak so the citrix session obviously picks up the microphone and inside the Windows session it works. So it's just for the Teams redirection the microphone isn't working.

Any updates on your issue? We started experiencing this same issue recently with our newer HP's (850 G6 and 850 G7). Both of these models use the Microphone Array (Intel Smart Sound Technology (Intel SST) too. I found an article -ms-teams-not-pulling-through-audio-devices/ that was similar (mic not showing in Teams at all). One poster stated that Teams only supports "Recording Devices: up to 3 channels, 16 bit, frequencies up to 48,000 Hz" per -us/citrix-virtual-apps-desktops/multimedia/opt-ms-teams.html#peripherals-in-microsoft-teams . That article is now updated and says "Recording Devices: up to 4 channels, 16 bit, frequencies up to 96,000 Hz". Teams identifies the microphone device and does not say "None". I wanted to still try scaling back the number of channels for the mic, but its been grayed out and unable to be changed (tried running as admin, unchecking the exclusive access options ect..). On the various other hardware we have tested and had the mic work in Teams, those mics all showed less than 4 channels. ff782bc1db

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