Why Hearing Matters When You Drive
Emergency sirens, honking horns, engine sounds, and navigation prompts all help you respond quickly, confidently, and safely while driving. Even with hearing aids, it’s important to make sure your devices are working at their best so you can stay fully aware of what’s happening around you.
Modern hearing aids are designed to support safer driving by helping you hear what matters and reducing distracting noise, but they work best when settings and technology are kept up to date. A well-adjusted device makes it easier to concentrate on the road.
Safe Driving With Modern Hearing Aid Technology
If you’ve been using older hearing aids, you may notice a big difference in the car. The combination of car and traffic noise can be surprisingly loud. Research shows that with basic hearing aid settings, you might only understand about 60% of what passengers say2.
Many newer devices use smart directionality to focus on the person speaking while reducing surrounding noise, an advancement that can improve speech understanding by 10–18% compared to older technology2. That might not sound like much, but it can mean the difference between catching most of a conversation versus missing key words and feeling frustrated.
Modern premium hearing aids automatically adjust to the situation but if you
want more control, some hearing aid apps allow you to temporarily adjust
where the hearing aids focus to better hear the person you want to hear in
the car2.
Jump To: Practical Tips for Driving With Hearing
Aids
When you wear two advanced hearing aids, they can communicate wirelessly to share sound information in real time. This coordination helps both ears work together, giving your brain a clearer signal to process and creating a more natural listening experience in the car.
Research shows that this type of binaural wireless coordination can improve speech understanding by up to 33% when a passenger is speaking from your side2. This is particularly useful in a noisy car environment where many sounds compete for your attention.
With built-in motion sensors, many modern hearing aids can detect when you're in a moving vehicle. They automatically adjust to reduce wind and road noise, making speech and important alerts easier to hear.
Practical Tips for Driving With Hearing Aids
This may seem obvious, but it's worth emphasizing. Wearing your hearing aids while driving keeps you aware of your surroundings and helps you respond quickly to auditory cues. It also ensures you don’t miss important sounds such as sirens or horns.
Close the windows when possible to reduce wind noise so your hearing aids can perform more effectively. To help you focus on navigation or conversations, you can:
If you still find it hard to hear passengers, ask your hearing care professional to adjust your hearing aids.
Many hearing aids offer smartphone apps that let you adjust settings on the go. If certain driving situations are challenging, you can create custom programs for clearer hearing. It is important to remember not to use the app while driving. If you need to make an adjustment, safely pull-over before using.
When to Consider Upgrading Your Hearing Aids
Sources:
1 The Gerontologist: Association of Hearing Impairment and Subsequent Driving Mobility in Older Adults (October 2016): https://academic.oup.com/gerontologist/article/57/5/767/2632006
2 Widex. (n.d.). Widex Allure. https://www.widexpro.com/en-ca/products/allure/