What is 528 Hz?
528 Hz is a musical tone, and a fairly high-pitched one. The "Hz" stands for hertz, the unit for how fast a sound vibrates: 528 Hz simply means the sound wave vibrates 528 times a second. There is nothing unusual about that number in itself. What makes 528 Hz famous is the marketing wrapped around it. It is the best-known member of the Solfeggio tones (a set of specific pitches promoted in wellness circles as having special powers), and it is widely sold as the "miracle tone" or "love frequency", with the eye-catching claim that it can repair human DNA.
This page is about that gap between the label and the evidence. The honest, one-line answer is this: 528 Hz is a perfectly pleasant tone with an appealing story attached, but there is no credible peer-reviewed evidence that it repairs DNA or heals anything. If a 528 Hz track helps you relax, that effect is real and worth enjoying; it just is not coming from a magic number. The rest of this article explains where the story came from, examines the DNA-repair claim directly, and sets out what the small body of actual research does and does not show.
528 Hz is just one tone in a larger set. For the full picture of all nine tones, where the wider idea comes from, and what the science says across the board, start with Sonora's complete Solfeggio guide, then come back here for the 528 Hz detail.
Where the 528 Hz story comes from
The popular story is that 528 Hz is an ancient, sacred frequency, lost for centuries and recently rediscovered. The real history is more modern and more interesting. The numbers we now call Solfeggio frequencies were not handed down from antiquity; they were worked out in the late twentieth century using numerology (the belief that numbers carry hidden meaning). The work is usually credited to Dr Joseph Puleo, who said he derived a set of six tones by applying a number-reduction method to verses from the biblical Book of Numbers, and to Dr Leonard Horowitz, who popularised the tones and their supposed healing powers, most prominently in the 1999 book "Healing Codes for the Biological Apocalypse".1 That is the actual origin of 528 Hz as a "healing" number: a 1990s numerological reading of scripture, not a finding from biology or acoustics.
There is a second clue that the number is a cultural choice rather than a natural law, and it sits in the tuning. Most Western music today uses a system called equal temperament (a standard way of spacing the twelve notes so every key sounds equally in tune), in which the note A is fixed at 440 Hz by international agreement.2 Under that standard tuning, 528 Hz does not land cleanly on a familiar note. To make 528 Hz come out as a tidy "C", you have to retune the whole scale so that A sits at about 444 Hz instead of 440 Hz, which is exactly the non-standard "A=444" tuning that 528 Hz advocates favour. In other words, 528 Hz is only "special" inside a tuning chosen to make it special. None of this is said to mock anyone who finds the tone meaningful; the point is simply that the "ancient sacred frequency" framing is a modern story, and a number chosen by numerology is not evidence that the number does anything in the body.
The DNA-repair claim, examined
Here is the claim, stated plainly so there is no straw man: that listening to 528 Hz music repairs or "heals" your DNA, and that this is why the tone deserves the name "miracle" or "love" frequency. It is repeated across thousands of videos and wellness pages, often presented as established fact.
It is not established fact. There is no credible peer-reviewed evidence that audible 528 Hz repairs human DNA, and the claim did not come from genetics in the first place. It traces back to the numerological and spiritual writing of Leonard Horowitz, not to any laboratory finding. That origin matters: a striking idea about DNA, born from numerology rather than biology, has been repeated so often that it now sounds scientific, but repetition is not evidence.
What about the studies people cite? The one most often pointed to is a small laboratory study by Babayi and Riazi, published in 2017, which exposed cultured human brain cells (astrocytes) to 528 Hz sound after damaging them with ethanol, and reported that the tone reduced cell death and a marker of cellular stress.3 Read honestly, that study does not support the popular claim. It was done in a dish, not in a person; it was about cells surviving alcohol damage, not about repairing DNA; and "DNA repair" appears in the paper only in its introduction, as a prior claim the authors mention, never as something they measured or found. It is a single small in-vitro experiment, the kind that points to "maybe worth a closer look", not "proven in humans". Stretching it into "528 Hz repairs your DNA when you listen to music" is a leap the evidence simply does not allow. The respectful, accurate summary is that the DNA-repair claim is unsupported, and that no study has shown a song repairing DNA in a living person.
What the evidence actually shows
It would be just as wrong to swing to the opposite extreme and say 528 Hz has been "proven to do nothing". The fair position is that the evidence specific to this tone is thin and preliminary, while the evidence for calming music in general is real but not frequency-specific. Both halves of that sentence matter.
On the tone itself, beyond the in-vitro study above, there are two small pieces of research. One, published in 2019, exposed rats to 528 Hz sound and reported changes in testosterone and a reduction in cellular stress markers; importantly, it was done at 100 decibels, a volume well above what is safe for human ears, and it is a single small animal study, not evidence of healing in people.4 The other, from 2018, had just nine people listen to 528 Hz music and reported lower levels of the stress hormone cortisol and higher oxytocin afterwards compared with standard-tuned music; with only nine participants and in a journal outside the main peer-reviewed indexes, it is an early hint at most, nowhere near proof.5 Two tiny studies, one in rats and one in nine people, cannot carry the weight of a "miracle frequency" claim. They are a reason for more research, not a reason to believe the marketing.
Now the part that is genuinely well supported, and it is the key to the whole topic. Calming, pleasant music can really help people relax, lift mood, and ease stress, for reasons that have nothing to do with hitting an exact pitch. A plain-English overview from the United States National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health, part of the National Institutes of Health, concludes that music-based approaches show promise for anxiety, pain, and sleep, while cautioning that many studies are small and more rigorous work is needed.6 Part of the reason is measurable in the brain: a well-known study in the journal Nature Neuroscience showed that intensely pleasurable music triggers the release of dopamine, a brain chemical tied to reward, in the same regions activated by other pleasures.7 Notice what that finding is about: enjoying music, not the specific number of vibrations per second. That is why a soothing 528 Hz track can genuinely feel good while the "this exact frequency heals you" claim still fails. For the wider body of research Sonora relies on, and how we read it, see Sonora's plain-English evidence base for sound and music.
528 Hz and sleep or calm
A common reason people seek out 528 Hz is to wind down or fall asleep, and there is no harm in using it that way. Calming music does have a reasonable evidence base for sleep: a Cochrane review, the kind of rigorous, independent summary regarded as a gold standard in medicine, found that listening to music improved how well adults with insomnia rated their sleep, with moderate-certainty evidence.8 The honest reading, though, is that this is about pleasant music helping you relax into sleep, not about 528 Hz in particular. A 432 Hz track, a 440 Hz track, or your favourite slow album would likely do the same job, because the active ingredient is calm, familiar, low-stimulation sound, not a magic pitch.
So by all means use 528 Hz music as a bedtime wind-down if you enjoy it. Just set your expectations on the right thing: you are giving yourself quiet, pleasant audio and a few minutes to slow down, and that is what helps. For broader, evidence-led guidance on choosing audio for bedtime, see our guide to the best frequency for sleep and what actually helps you drift off.
How to listen without overclaiming
If you like 528 Hz, enjoy it. It is ordinary audio, low-risk at sensible volumes, and there is nothing wrong with finding a particular track soothing or meaningful. The only real caution is the same as for any music through headphones: keep the volume moderate. 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, so there is nothing to gain from playing these tones loudly.9
The healthier mindset is to separate the experience from the explanation. The calm is real; the "repairs your DNA" mechanism is not. You can hold both at once. This is also where Sonora's approach differs: rather than insisting one magic frequency suits everyone, Sonora matches sound to the listener and the moment, and frames it honestly as support for relaxation, sleep, and focus rather than as a cure. If 432 Hz comes up in your reading too, that is a separate tuning debate rather than a healing claim, and we cover it in our comparison of 432 Hz versus 440 Hz tuning. You can try Sonora free to hear what evidence-aware sound feels like. To keep exploring, browse all articles in the Learn library.