This guide is for general information and is not medical advice. ADHD (attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, a recognised medical condition) should be assessed and managed by a qualified clinician. Binaural beats are not a treatment for ADHD and do not replace ADHD care, including any medication or therapy. This page is the narrow, binaural-beats-specific resource; for the broader picture of sound and attention, see our wider guide to sound therapy for ADHD.
Do binaural beats help ADHD?
The honest answer is that the evidence is limited and mixed. Binaural beats are an audio effect: play a slightly different tone in each ear through headphones and the brain perceives a third, gentle pulsing beat. Some people with ADHD say that listening to them helps them settle and concentrate during work or study; others notice little or nothing. What the careful research does not show is that binaural beats treat ADHD, reduce its core symptoms, or stand in for any part of ADHD care. They are best thought of as a low-stakes focus aid you can experiment with, not a therapy.
This page is deliberately narrow. It covers the binaural-beats-specific question only. If you want the wider view, comparing noise colours such as brown noise, study music, and other focus sounds for attention difficulties, that lives in our broader guide to sound and focus for attention difficulties. Here we stick to the two-tone effect, what the evidence on it actually says, how some people use it, and where its limits lie. Throughout, the framing is the same: a possible complement for some people, never a substitute for clinician-led care.
For how the two-tone effect works and the wider evidence, see the binaural beats pillar.
What the research actually says
Start with the most directly relevant study. A small pilot trial in adults with ADHD, run as an add-on alongside their usual treatment, tested 15 Hz binaural beats during study sessions. It found a significant improvement in how well participants rated their own studying, but no significant change on the formal measures that matter most: the core ADHD symptom rating scale, a mind-wandering questionnaire, and a sustained-attention task all showed no clear effect.1 The authors were careful to call these preliminary findings that need confirming in a larger sample. Read plainly, that is a hint of a subjective benefit sitting on top of medication, with no measured effect on ADHD itself.
The picture for attention more broadly is just as cautious. A 2025 study that tested many different binaural-beat settings on sustained attention found that results depended heavily on the exact parameters, that one gamma-frequency setup helped general attention performance, and that, importantly, it did not stop attention from fading over time on a long, monotonous task. The researchers concluded that binaural beats may nudge other aspects of thinking rather than reliably strengthening sustained focus.2 The honest takeaway is that even on attention in general, never mind ADHD specifically, the effects are small, patchy, and far from a guaranteed focus upgrade.
Step back to the underlying mechanism and the caution deepens. A systematic review that gathered the studies measuring brain activity directly found the evidence genuinely unsettled: only a minority of studies supported the idea that binaural beats entrain the brain's rhythms, most did not, and the authors said the question could not be settled at this point.3 So the building block that the marketing rests on, the claim that a beat reliably shifts your brain state, is itself shaky. The most-cited positive evidence for binaural beats comes from a meta-analysis of 22 studies that reported a medium overall effect on cognition, anxiety, and pain in the general population, with longer sessions working better.4 That is a real result, but it was not about ADHD, and a benefit in healthy volunteers does not automatically transfer to a clinical condition. For the wider debate about whether binaural beats work at all, see our guide on whether binaural beats really work.
Why some people with ADHD find them helpful
Plenty of people with ADHD report that putting on binaural beats helps them knuckle down, and that experience is worth taking seriously even where the formal evidence is thin. A few plain, non-clinical reasons may explain it. The first is simple structure: choosing a track and pressing play can mark the start of a work session, a small ritual that helps some people begin a task they have been avoiding. The second is masking: a steady, even sound covers up the sudden noises (a door, a notification, a snatch of talk) that can derail attention, and because binaural beats need headphones, they also physically block out a noisy room.
The third reason is personal fit. People are different, and being neurodivergent (having a brain that works differently from what is typical, as with ADHD) means focus tools that work for one person may do nothing for another. For some, a quiet, predictable background hum is genuinely steadying; for others it is one more thing to fiddle with. None of this is a clinical effect on ADHD, and it is fair to note that much of the benefit people feel may come from the headphones and the routine rather than the beat itself. That does not make it useless. If a calm soundtrack helps you start and stay with a task, that is a real, everyday gain, as long as you hold it as a personal aid rather than a treatment.
How to try binaural beats with ADHD
If you want to experiment, a few practical points make it more useful and keep it safe. First, you need stereo headphones; this is not optional. A binaural beat only exists because each ear receives a slightly different tone, and the brain builds the beat from the difference. Play the same audio through a speaker and the tones mix in the air, the per-ear difference is lost, and the beat never forms. So headphones are essential.
Second, treat it as an experiment you track rather than a fixed prescription. There is no proven ADHD-specific frequency, and the attention research suggests results vary a lot with the exact settings, so the only way to know whether it helps you is to try it on real tasks and notice the difference. Faster beats in the beta and gamma ranges (beta and gamma are the brain's quicker natural rhythms, loosely linked with alert, busy thinking) are the ones usually marketed for focus, but do not over-trust the labels; pick what you find pleasant and pay attention to whether your work actually improves. Give a setup a fair run across several sessions rather than judging it once, since how a sound feels in the first minute is a poor guide to whether it helped.
Third, keep the volume moderate. Because headphones are involved, it is easy to listen too loudly for too long, which can harm hearing over time. The World Health Organization advises that listening at around 80 decibels is safe for up to about 40 hours a week, with the safe time falling sharply as the volume rises.5 This is also where an adaptive app rather than a fixed playlist can help. Sonora is built to match sound to the listener and the moment, and you can try Sonora free to use its focus soundscapes as a complement while you work. As ever, that is a focus aid, not ADHD treatment.
Binaural beats compared with other focus sounds
Binaural beats are only one of many sounds people reach for when they need to concentrate, and they are not obviously the best. Plenty of people with ADHD prefer brown noise, white noise, rain, or wordless study music, none of which needs headphones and several of which are at least as well liked for focus. The research does not crown a clear winner, and what suits you is largely personal. There is one honest practical difference worth knowing: noise colours and ambient sound work fine on a speaker, while binaural beats genuinely require headphones, so for long sessions some people find steady noise more comfortable. We do not cover those broader options in depth here. For the full comparison of brown noise, study music, and other focus sounds for attention, read our broader guide to sound and focus for attention difficulties. And if your interest is concentration in general rather than ADHD specifically, see our guide to binaural beats for focus more generally.
ADHD care comes first
This is the part that matters most. Binaural beats are not a treatment for ADHD, and they do not replace ADHD care: assessment, behavioural and educational support, and any medication or therapy belong with a qualified clinician. ADHD is a recognised medical condition that benefits from a proper, individual assessment. If you think you or your child may have ADHD, or you are struggling with attention, the right first step is to speak to a GP, who can refer you for an assessment with a specialist such as a psychiatrist; the NHS sets out this pathway for adults.6 In the United Kingdom, NICE guidance on diagnosing and managing ADHD across children, young people, and adults describes the specialist assessment and the medication and non-medication options that make up real ADHD care.7 Sound can sit alongside that care as a low-risk comfort if you find it helpful, but it is never a substitute for it. Never change or stop prescribed ADHD medication because a soundtrack feels useful; discuss any change with the clinician looking after you. You can see the full evidence base behind our claims on Sonora's evidence base.