What is pink noise?
Pink noise is a steady, random background sound, the kind people compare to steady rainfall or a distant waterfall. It belongs to the same family as white noise, but its energy is balanced differently across the range of pitches, which is what gives it that fuller, softer character. In plain terms, a frequency is how fast a sound vibrates, measured in hertz (written Hz); low frequencies are deep, rumbling tones and high frequencies are bright, hissy ones. Where white noise carries about the same energy at every pitch, pink noise carries more of its energy down in the deeper, lower pitches and steadily less as the pitch climbs.
The technical name for that pattern is 1/f noise (said "one over f", where f stands for frequency). It simply means the energy is inversely related to the pitch: as the pitch goes up, the energy comes down in step. The Acoustical Society of America defines pink noise formally as noise whose spectrum density varies as the inverse of frequency, which is exactly this 1/f tilt.1 Put in everyday loudness terms, the energy falls by about 3 decibels per octave (a decibel is the standard unit for loudness, and an octave is a doubling of pitch). That gentle, even slope is why pink noise sounds balanced and natural rather than bright and harsh, and why so many people reach for it to relax or to settle a room.
Pink noise is one member of a wider family of steady background sounds named after colours. For the full map of how white, pink, brown, and the rarer colours differ, see our plain-English guide to the colours of noise, then come back here for pink noise in detail.
Why pink noise sounds more natural
The difference between pink and white noise is easiest to hear, but it helps to know why it is there. White noise gives every pitch the same energy, so the bright, high pitches are just as strong as the deep, low ones. Human hearing is very sensitive to those high pitches, so an even spread sounds bright and a little hissy, like static from an untuned radio. Pink noise tilts that balance back toward the deeper end, taking some of the edge off the high pitches, so the result sounds softer, rounder, and closer to sounds we meet in nature, such as steady rain, a waterfall, or wind through trees.
That is why pink noise is often described as the more "natural" or "balanced" of the two. It is not that pink noise is doing something cleverer than white noise; it is simply weighted in a way many ears find more comfortable over long stretches. This matters for everyday use, because a sound you find pleasant is one you will actually keep on, and comfort is a perfectly good reason to prefer one colour over another. Some people still favour the brighter hiss of white noise, and neither preference is wrong. The honest point is that the choice between them is mostly about taste, not about one being secretly more effective than the other.
Pink noise benefits
The plain, dependable benefit of pink noise is the same as for any steady background sound: masking. A constant, even wash of sound raises the background level in a room and blurs the sudden noises (a slamming door, a passing car, a snoring partner) that would otherwise stand out against the quiet and grab your attention or wake you. Because pink noise leans toward the lower pitches, many people find it a gentler masking sound than white noise for long listening, which is its main practical appeal for relaxing, reading, or winding down.
Beyond masking, the honest status of pink noise is "popular and worth trying if you like it", rather than proven to do anything special. This fits what national health bodies say about sound and wellbeing in general: the United States National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health, part of the National Institutes of Health, notes that music-based and sound-based approaches show genuine promise for things like relaxation and sleep, but that much of the research is still preliminary and larger, more rigorous studies are needed before strong conclusions are drawn.2 People also use pink noise as a background for focus, on the same masking logic: by blurring a distracting room it can make it easier to stay on task for some people, while others find any added sound unhelpful. As with relaxation, the picture is mixed and very individual, so the sensible test is simply whether you find it pleasant and helpful at a low volume. None of this requires the sound to do anything mysterious; the value is masking plus comfort, which is a modest but real benefit.
Pink noise and deep sleep: what the research shows
Pink noise has a place in some genuinely interesting sleep science, and it is the part most likely to be oversold, so it is worth setting out carefully. Researchers have explored whether playing brief, quiet bursts of pink noise during the deepest stage of sleep can deepen that sleep, and the early findings are promising. A 2017 study in Frontiers in Human Neuroscience worked with a small group of older adults and reported that the technique enhanced their slow-wave activity (the large, slow brain waves of deep sleep) and was linked to better word recall the next morning.3 That sounds like exactly the headline a pink-noise app would love, so the detail of how it was done matters enormously.
The key point is that this was closed-loop stimulation, not a track left playing all night. Equipment recorded each sleeper's brain waves live on an EEG (a recording of the brain's electrical activity from sensors on the scalp), a real-time algorithm predicted the exact rising moment of each of the person's own slow waves, and a brief pink-noise pulse was fired at precisely that instant, over and over, in a sleep laboratory. The same approach was first shown in a 2013 study in Neuron, which found that timing the sound to the brain's own slow waves strengthened those waves and improved memory, while the very same sound delivered out of step did nothing.4 That last finding is the whole story in miniature: the benefit comes from the precise, brain-responsive timing, not from the pink noise itself.
So this is a promising research technique, not a proven benefit of listening to pink noise at home. The studies are small (the 2017 work involved thirteen people), they were done in a laboratory with brain-reading equipment, and they do not show that a pre-recorded pink-noise track from an app or speaker improves memory or deepens sleep. A fixed track cannot know where your slow waves are, so it cannot do what those studies did. The research is a genuine and exciting direction, and it is fair to find it fascinating, but any product implying it has bottled this effect into a downloadable track is claiming more than the evidence supports. For everyday listening, treat pink noise as a pleasant, calming sound that may help you relax and mask noise, not as a switch for deep sleep or memory.
Pink noise for sleep, in practice
Stepping back from the laboratory, the practical question is whether pink noise helps ordinary sleep, and the honest answer is the same modest one that applies to any steady noise. A systematic review in Sleep Medicine Reviews that gathered the studies on continuous noise as a sleep aid found the overall quality of the evidence was very low, and that continuous noise could either improve or disrupt sleep depending on the study, so the authors said more rigorous research is needed before it is promoted as a sleep aid.5 In other words, pink noise is worth trying if you find it soothing, at a low volume, rather than relied on as a remedy. If a quiet, even sound helps you settle by masking a noisy environment, that is a real and worthwhile benefit. Which colour of noise tends to suit sleep, and how pink stacks up against the others for bedtime, is covered in our guide to the best noise colour for sleep, and the wider picture of bedtime audio is in our sound-for-sleep pillar (each publishes as that guide ships). If your sleep problems are persistent or have lasted for months, that is more than any soundtrack can address, and it is worth seeing a GP, who can point you to treatments designed for sleep.6
Pink vs white vs brown
Once you know pink noise exists, the natural next question is how it compares with its neighbours, and the difference is all in the tilt of the energy across the pitches. White noise spreads its energy evenly across every pitch, so it sounds bright and full, like static; for the full picture, see our complete guide to white noise. Pink sits in the middle, tilted gently toward the deeper end, which is why it sounds softer and more like rain. Brown noise tilts deeper still, giving a low, full rumble closer to distant thunder, and is popular for calm and background focus; see our complete guide to brown noise. The most-asked head-to-head pits the bright hiss of white against the deep rumble of brown; for that side-by-side, read our white and brown noise comparison (each publishes when that guide ships). The honest bottom line across all of them is the same: they differ in how bright or deep they sound, not in any magic effect, and none is proven to beat the others for sleep or focus, so let your own ear decide. You can also try Sonora free to hear an approach that adapts the sound to you and the moment rather than handing you a single fixed track, and you can see the full citation list behind Sonora's claims on Sonora's evidence base.