RoomTreat

Acoustic Treatment 101

Acoustic treatment controls how sound behaves inside a room (reflections, reverberation, bass build-up). It is not soundproofing, which stops sound leaving or entering. This guide covers treatment, in the order that gives the most improvement per panel.

The order that matters

Beginners often cover the walls with thin foam and wonder why the bass is still a mess. The fix is priority: spend your first money where the energy is highest.

Priority decision table

PriorityWhereWhatWhy
14 vertical cornersFloor-to-ceiling broadband bass trapsBass pressure peaks in corners; this is the biggest single win.
2Side walls + ceiling, first reflection points50–100 mm broadband panelsKills comb filtering that smears the stereo image.
3Front wall (behind speakers)Broadband panelsTightens low-mids around the monitors.
4Remaining wall areaBroadband panels to hit coverage targetBrings overall RT60 into range.
5Rear wallAbsorption or diffusionControls slap-back; diffusion keeps the room from sounding dead.
Thin (25 mm) foam barely touches anything below ~500 Hz. For broadband control use 50–100 mm mineral wool or rigid fibreglass — see the absorption database to compare.

Step-by-step

  1. Measure. Get length, width, height. Run the room mode calculator — a poor ratio means you'll lean harder on bass traps.
  2. Corners first. Four floor-to-ceiling bass traps. The panel calculator assumes this.
  3. First reflections. Use the mirror trick (next guide) to find them.
  4. Hit your coverage target. 30–40% of wall+ceiling for mixing; less for casual use. The calculator gives you the number.
  5. Verify with RT60. Re-run the RT60 calculator with your added panels as surfaces and check you're in the target band.

How much is enough?

More absorption is not always better. Over-treat and the room sounds unnaturally dead and fatiguing. Aim for the target RT60 band for your use-case rather than the lowest possible number — the calculator shows whether you're "too dead", "on target", or "too live".

Next: Find your first reflection points →