4.8 stars | 6,800+ reviews | Ships across the United States
My bedroom is next to a busy street in Dallas. Cars at 2am, trucks at 5am, and a neighbor who apparently does laundry at midnight. For years I just dealt with it. Earplugs gave me headaches. Fans were too cold in winter.
Then I tried the Snoozzie white noise machine.
Here's everything after 30 days of actual use.
The thing is smaller than I expected. About the size of a large coffee mug, maybe smaller. It felt solid, not cheap plastic. The buttons are simple: power, volume up, volume down, next sound, timer.
No instruction booklet needed. I figured it out in 2 minutes.
Charged it with USB-C (same cable as my phone), took about 90 minutes to fill up completely. Then I put it on my nightstand and picked a sound.
First night I went with rain. Slept 7 hours straight. That hadn't happened in months.
Here's the simple version of how it works.
Your brain doesn't fully shut off when you sleep. It keeps monitoring sounds in case something dangerous happens. Every sudden noise, a car horn, a door slam, your partner rolling over, registers as a potential threat and pulls you toward waking up.
White noise and nature sounds work because they give your brain a constant, steady signal to focus on. Sudden noises still happen, but they don't stand out as much against the background sound. Your brain stops treating every bump as an alarm.
Snoozzie plays 24 different sounds at 10 volume levels. You find what works for you and let it run.
I tried most of them over 30 days. Here's my honest take:
Rain β my personal favorite. Steady, natural, no weird loops. Good for falling asleep.
White noise β the classic static sound. Works well if rain feels too "wet" for you. Some people need this specific frequency to stop their brain from wandering.
Ocean waves β relaxing but has a rhythm to it. Some people love this, I found it a little too "wavy" personally.
Fan sounds β similar to white noise but with more texture. Good for people used to sleeping with a fan running.
Lullabies β not for me, but my friend uses this for her 8-month-old and says it's the only thing that gets her baby to sleep past 5am.
Piano β softer and more musical. Works better for winding down than for deep sleep masking.
The honest answer is everyone's different. The fact that Snoozzie gives you 24 options means you'll find something that clicks.
Yes. I charged it Sunday night and used it every night for sleep (around 7 to 8 hours each night). It lasted until Wednesday evening before needing a charge.
That's roughly 3 nights per charge at normal use. The 18-hour claim is accurate if you're using a timer and not running it all night without stopping.
USB-C charging is a small but real convenience. I use the same cable for my phone and my Snoozzie. One less cable to carry when I travel.
The auto noise detection feature
This is the feature I didn't think I'd care about but ended up loving.
You hold the power button for 1.5 seconds from standby mode to activate it. Once on, the machine senses when the room gets noisy and turns itself on. When things go quiet for 15 minutes, it turns off automatically.
So if you fall asleep in a quiet room and a truck drives by at 3am, Snoozzie turns on. Covers the noise. Turns back off once the street quiets down. You sleep through all of it without ever waking up to press a button.
For light sleepers, this feature alone is worth the price.
I took it on a work trip to Chicago last month. Packed it in my carry-on next to my laptop. It takes up less space than a water bottle.
Hotel rooms are notoriously bad for sleep. Thin walls, hallway noise, HVAC that rattles. I plugged in the rain sound, set it to medium volume, and slept better than I do at home some nights.
The battery held for the entire 3-night trip without needing a charge, because I used the 2-hour timer each night instead of running it all night.
Hold the timer button and a soft glow turns on. It's not bright enough to wake anyone up, but it's enough to see where you're walking in a dark room.
Parents with babies in the room will get the most use out of this. Middle-of-the-night diaper changes without flipping on a harsh overhead light is a real quality-of-life improvement.
If any of these sound like you, Snoozzie probably solves your problem:
You wake up multiple times a night because of noise
Your partner snores and you're out of ideas
Your baby wakes up at every little sound
You travel for work and can't sleep in hotels
You live in a city or apartment with thin walls
You have trouble shutting your brain off at bedtime
If you sleep in a quiet house, live alone, and have no noise issues, you probably don't need this. But most Americans don't live that way.
A few things I'd improve if I could:
The volume tops out at a level that handles most noise situations, but if you're dealing with something extreme (like an actual construction site), you might want more. It's loud enough for snoring and traffic. Maybe not for a jackhammer at 7am.
There's no app. You can't control it from your phone or set schedules. For a simple device this is fine, but some people want that connectivity.
The auto-detection sensitivity can't be adjusted. It either detects noise or it doesn't. A sensitivity slider would be a nice addition for future versions.
A lot of people try sleep sound apps first. Here's why Snoozzie works better for most people:
Your phone screen lighting up with notifications at 2am defeats the whole purpose. Phone speakers are also small and tinny, so the sound quality is noticeably worse. And running a sound app all night drains your battery.
Snoozzie is a dedicated device. It does one thing and does it well. No notifications, no battery drain on your phone, better speaker quality, and it sits on your nightstand without tempting you to check Twitter.
The 6,800+ reviews on the Snoozzie site tell a consistent story. Here's what kept showing up:
Kathleen P. bought it for her boyfriend's snoring. First night, slept straight through. "I wake up feeling rested now instead of cranky."
Natalie G. uses the lullaby track for her baby. Baby now sleeps longer stretches and settles faster during naps.
Stevie T. travels constantly for work. Hotels used to wreck his sleep. Now packs Snoozzie every trip.
Benny E. bought it for sleep but noticed his overall stress level dropped from just unwinding better at night.
Matthew L. specifically called out that Snoozzie doesn't have a weird motor hum or background buzz that cheaper machines have.
97% of reviewers said they'd recommend it to a friend. That's a real number, not a marketing line.
Price and guarantee?
Snoozzie is currently running a 75% discount on their official website. They also back it with a 30-day money-back guarantee, so if it doesn't improve your sleep, you return it for a full refund. No complicated process.
Fast shipping across the United States. Stock sells out regularly so availability changes.
30 days in, I sleep better. Specifically, I fall asleep faster and wake up less. The rain sound at medium volume covers the street noise completely. The battery lasts long enough that charging is maybe a twice-a-week thing.
The auto noise detection is genuinely clever. The travel size is genuinely useful. The 24 sounds mean you'll find at least 2 or 3 that work for you.
For anyone dealing with noise-related sleep issues, this is one of the more practical purchases you can make. It doesn't require any habit changes. You just turn it on.
FAQs?
Q: What is the Snoozzie machine?
A portable white noise machine that plays 24 calming sounds to cover up background noise and help you fall asleep faster and stay asleep longer.
Q: Is Snoozzie good for blocking snoring sounds?
Yes. Set the volume to a medium-high level and the white noise or fan sounds cover most snoring. Hundreds of reviewers specifically bought it for this reason.
Q: How do I set up the Snoozzie machine?
Press the power button for 1.5 seconds to turn on. Tap the next button to pick a sound. Use volume buttons to adjust. Press the timer button to set how long it runs. That's it.
Q: Does Snoozzie work for babies?
Yes. It has lullaby tracks and soft white noise options made for this. The built-in night light also helps with nighttime check-ins without waking baby up.
Q: Can I use Snoozzie without Wi-Fi?
Yes. It doesn't need Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, or an app. It works completely on its own.
Q: How loud does Snoozzie get?
It has 10 volume settings. The top end is loud enough to cover snoring and city traffic in most situations.
Q: Is Snoozzie worth the money?
For people with noise-related sleep problems, yes. The 30-day guarantee means there's no financial risk in trying it.
Q: How do I activate the auto noise detection on Snoozzie?
Hold the power button for 1.5 seconds from standby mode. It will turn on automatically when it detects sound and shut off after 15 minutes of quiet.
Q: Does Snoozzie come with a warranty?
It comes with a 30-day money-back guarantee. If you're not happy with your sleep results, you get a full refund.
Q: Where can I buy the Snoozzie white noise machine in the US?
Through the official website at get-snoozzie.com. They ship fast across the United States and currently have a discount running.