How to Turn on Sound Check on iPhone and Other iOS Devices

Sound Check is a feature of the iPhone and other Apple devices. With Sound Check turned on, not only do you have a better music-listening experience, but you also protect your hearing. To turn on Sound Check on your iPhone, iPad or iPod Touch, follow these steps:

How to Turn on Sound Check on iPod Classic and iPod nano

For iPods like the original iPod line, iPod Classic, or iPod nano that don’t run the iOS, the instructions are slightly different. These steps apply to an iPod with a Clickwheel. If your iPod has a touch screen, like some later models of the iPod nano, adapting these instructions is easy.

How to Use Sound Check in Apple Music, iTunes and on iPod Shuffle

Sound Check also works with Apple Music and iTunes, and levels out your playback volume in those apps. If you have an iPod Shuffle, you use iTunes to turn on Sound Check on the Shuffle.

How to Turn on Sound Check on Apple TV 4K and 4th Generation Apple TV

The Apple TV can be the center of a home stereo system with its support for playing an iCloud Music Library or Apple Music collection. The Apple TV 4K and the 4th generation Apple TV also support Sound Check. To turn on Sound Check on those models of the Apple TV, follow these steps:

What Is Sound Check?

Sound Check is a feature of the iPhone, iPod, and other devices that plays all of your songs at roughly the same volume, no matter their original volume. It’s designed to make listening to music a consistent, comfortable experience no matter what song is playing. Songs are recorded at different volumes and with different technologies. This is especially true of older recordings, which are often quieter than modern ones. Because of this, the default volume of songs on your iPhone or iPod differs. This can be annoying, especially if you turned up the volume to hear a quiet song, and the next one is so loud that it hurts your ears. Sound Check is designed to fix that.

How Sound Check Works

The way Sound Check works is really smart. It doesn’t edit music files or actually change their real volume. Instead, Sound Check scans all of your music to understand its basic volume information. Sound Check then calculates the average volume level of all of your music. With that information, it tweaks the ID3 tag of each song to create a roughly even volume ​for all songs. The ID3 tag contains metadata, or information, about the song and its volume level. Sound Check changes the ID3 tag to adjust the playback volume, but the music file itself isn’t changed. You can return to the song’s original volume by turning off Sound Check.