Headphones & Earbuds

Seven Signs Your Earbuds Are the Wrong Size (and How to Fix It)

Earbuds that hurt, fall out, or sound thin are often the wrong size. Spot seven telltale signs and fix your fit for better sound and comfort.

True wireless earbuds in an open case
Photograph via Unsplash

I test earbuds for a living, and the single most common complaint I hear is some version of "they just don't sound as good as the reviews say." Nine times out of ten, the earbuds are fine. The fit is wrong. Almost every pair ships with a middling default tip that fits almost nobody perfectly, and most people never touch the little baggie of spares. Here are the seven signs I look for, and exactly how to fix each one.

1. The Bass Sounds Thin or Hollow#

This is the big one, and it's the sign people misread most often. If your earbuds sound bright, papery, or bass-shy, your first instinct is probably to blame the drivers or crank an EQ. Resist that. Weak bass is almost always a broken seal, not a weak speaker.

In-ear monitors rely on sealing the ear canal to build up air pressure. Low frequencies are the first casualty of a leak because bass is essentially pressurized air, and air escaping past a loose tip bleeds those frequencies straight out. High frequencies survive a poor seal far better, which is why leaky earbuds sound tinny and thin rather than muffled.

How to test it#

Put the earbuds in, play a bass-heavy track, then gently press each bud a little deeper with a fingertip. If the low end suddenly blooms and the sound gets fuller and warmer the moment you push, your everyday seal is leaking. That surge is what a correct fit should sound like all the time. The fix is a larger or differently shaped tip, not more EQ.

2. They Slowly Work Their Way Out#

You seat the buds, they feel fine, and twenty minutes later one is dangling. This slow creep is a classic sign the tips are too small. A tip that's undersized can't grip the canal walls, so jaw movement from talking, chewing, or walking gradually pumps it loose.

People often go smaller because a bigger tip felt like "too much" in the first five seconds. But an earbud should feel secure and slightly present, not barely-there. If you can talk through a whole meeting and feel the bud migrating outward, size up.

3. There's Pressure, Fullness, or Outright Pain#

The opposite problem. If your ears ache after an hour, feel plugged like you're on a descending plane, or you get a dull throb in the canal, the tips are too large or seated too deep. Oversized tips wedge against the canal walls and put constant outward pressure on sensitive tissue.

A few realistic caveats here:

  • Some initial awareness is normal. A good seal will always feel like something is in your ear. Pain, throbbing, or a stuffy blocked feeling is not.
  • Silicone versus foam matters. Memory foam tips expand to fill the canal and spread pressure more evenly, which helps people who find silicone harsh. The trade-off is that foam muffles some treble air and wears out faster.
  • Watch for redness. If you pull a bud out after an hour and the ear is red or tender, that's your body telling you to go down a size.

4. One Ear Sounds Different From the Other#

Here's a surprise for a lot of people: your two ear canals are not the same size. Mild asymmetry is completely normal, and it's the reason so many earbuds seem to have a "bad side."

If the left sounds fuller than the right, or one side keeps loosening while the other stays put, stop using matched tips. Most tip kits give you three or four pairs precisely so you can mix them. I routinely run a medium in one ear and a large in the other. There's nothing wrong with the hardware and nothing wrong with your ears. Match the tip to each canal independently and the imbalance usually vanishes.

5. Wind, Footsteps, and Chewing Are Deafening#

If walking sounds like a drum solo, or wind roars across the mics, or your own chewing drowns out a podcast, you may be dealing with two related issues.

The chewing and footstep thump is the occlusion effect — sound conducted through your own skull, amplified because the sealed canal traps it. A deeper, more secure seal can actually reduce this because a loosely seated bud rattles and transmits more body noise. Counterintuitive, but true.

Wind noise is trickier. A better seal helps passive isolation, but howling wind is often the active noise cancellation microphones struggling. If your earbuds have a wind-reduction or transparency mode, that will do more than any tip swap. Still, a solid seal is the foundation; ANC works far better when the canal is properly closed, because the system isn't fighting a leak.

6. Noise Cancelling Barely Does Anything#

Speaking of ANC. If you paid for active noise cancelling and the world still pours in, don't assume the feature is weak. ANC and seal are a team. Active cancellation handles low, droning frequencies — engine hum, HVAC, a plane cabin — while the physical seal blocks the higher-frequency clatter of voices, keyboards, and dishes.

A poor seal sabotages both halves. The leak lets mid and high noise straight in, and it also feeds the cancellation circuit unpredictable pressure it can't model, so even the low-end suppression suffers. Before you conclude a pair has bad ANC, get the fit right and test again in the same environment. I've had earbuds go from mediocre to genuinely quiet with nothing but a tip change.

7. You Constantly Reach Up to Adjust Them#

The most human sign of all. If your hand keeps drifting to your ear to push, twist, or reseat a bud, that fidgeting is data. A correctly sized earbud should disappear. You seat it once and forget it's there until the battery dies.

Constant readjustment usually means one of two things: the tip is too small to hold position, or the shape of the bud doesn't suit your ear. Some people need a wing or fin for stability; some canals prefer a longer, narrower tip that reaches deeper; oval-shaped tips suit oval canals better than round ones. If sizing alone never solves it, the geometry is the problem, not the size number.

How to Fix Your Fit, Step by Step#

Here's the routine I run with every new pair. It takes about ten minutes and costs nothing.

  1. Start one size up from the default. Manufacturers tend to ship a medium and most people undershoot. Bigger-than-comfortable-in-the-first-second is often correct once seated.
  2. Do the press test. Play bass-heavy music, push each bud gently deeper, and note if the low end jumps. If it does, your resting seal is leaking — size up or change shape.
  3. Mix sizes between ears. Treat left and right as separate problems. Asymmetry is the rule, not the exception.
  4. Walk, talk, and chew. Wear them through a real activity, not a still moment at your desk. Fit failures show up in motion.
  5. Give foam a shot. If silicone always feels harsh or slips, memory-foam tips seal beautifully and stay put, at the cost of a little treble sparkle and some longevity.
  6. Consider third-party tips. Aftermarket tips from specialist makers come in wider size ranges and shapes than the stock kit. This is genuinely the cheapest upgrade in all of audio — often the difference between "fine" and "why did the reviews rave about these."

A note on eartip materials and hygiene#

Whatever you land on, keep the tips clean. Wax buildup narrows the bore, dulls treble, and quietly wrecks the seal you worked to find. Pull the tips off and wash the silicone ones with warm water every couple of weeks. Replace foam tips when they stop springing back — usually every couple of months of regular use. A degraded tip fails the same way a wrong-sized one does, so an old fit can drift out of spec without you changing anything.

The Bottom Line#

Before you return a pair, blame the ANC, or convince yourself you just don't like a set of earbuds, work the fit first. Thin bass, buds that creep out, ear fatigue, lopsided channels, roaring footsteps, feeble noise cancelling, and constant fidgeting are all the same story told seven ways: the tip is the wrong size or shape for your ear.

Swapping tips is the single highest-return, lowest-cost thing you can do for your listening. Spend the ten minutes. Most of the time, the earbuds were never the problem.

Marcus Reed
Written by
Marcus Reed

Marcus has reviewed hundreds of headphones and in-ear monitors the only way that counts — by living with them for weeks and measuring what he hears. A former live-sound engineer, he cares less about spec sheets than about whether a pair still makes you want to finish the album. He is quietly obsessed with fit, tuning and the unglamorous business of getting good sound for less money.

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