How to Soundproof a Door: The Complete Guide
Doors are the #1 weak point in most rooms. Here's how to soundproof yours — from $10 quick fixes to full acoustic door upgrades.
From the team behind the QuietScore iOS app
If sound is leaking into your room, the door is almost always the biggest offender. A standard hollow-core interior door has an STC rating of 20–25 — meaning normal conversation passes right through it. Even a decent wall (STC 33–35) is wasted if the door next to it lets everything in.
The good news: doors are also the easiest and cheapest barrier to improve.
Why doors are the weak link
Three reasons doors fail at blocking sound:
- They’re hollow. Most interior doors are two thin panels with a cardboard honeycomb core. They weigh about 12 kg (26 lbs) — not enough mass to stop anything.
- They have gaps everywhere. The gap under a typical interior door is 5–15mm. Add the gaps around the frame, and you might have 50+ square centimeters of open air — a direct highway for sound.
- They’re thin. Even solid-core doors are only 35–44mm thick, compared to walls that are 100mm+ with insulation.
Step 1: Seal the gaps (biggest bang for your buck)
Before replacing or upgrading the door itself, seal what you have. Gap sealing alone can improve a door’s performance by 3–8 STC points.
Under the door
The gap under the door is the single biggest sound leak in most rooms.
Options (from cheapest to best):
| Solution | Cost | Durability | Effectiveness |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rolled towel | Free | Temporary | Low — doesn’t seal fully |
| Adhesive foam strip | $5 | 6–12 months | Moderate — compresses over time |
| Screw-on door sweep | $10–$15 | 2+ years | Good — consistent seal |
| Automatic drop seal | $25–$60 | 5+ years | Best — lifts when door opens, drops when closed |
Automatic drop seals are the gold standard. They’re spring-loaded — when the door closes, a rubber seal drops to meet the floor. When it opens, the seal lifts so it doesn’t drag on carpet. Worth the extra cost if you’re serious about sound.
Installation tip: The seal should compress slightly against the floor when the door is closed. If you can see light under the door, sound is getting through.
Around the frame
The gap between the door and the frame (on the hinge side, latch side, and top) leaks sound too.
Fix: Apply self-adhesive weatherstripping around the entire door frame — all three sides.
- Foam tape ($5) — Cheap, easy, but compresses and loses seal within a year
- Rubber weatherstripping ($8–$12) — More durable, better seal
- Kerf-in weatherstripping ($15–$20) — Fits into a slot cut in the frame. Professional look, best seal, but requires a router or table saw
Test your seal: Close the door and try sliding a piece of paper between the door and frame at multiple points. If the paper slides freely, the seal isn’t tight enough.
Around the door frame
Don’t forget the gap between the door frame and the wall. This is often hidden behind trim but can be a significant sound path.
Fix: Remove the trim, fill the gap with expanding foam (use “minimal expansion” type — regular foam can warp the frame), let it cure, and replace the trim. Alternatively, inject acoustic caulk into the gap.
Step 2: Add mass to the door
Once gaps are sealed, the door itself becomes the limiting factor. More mass = more sound blocked.
Option A: Mass loaded vinyl (MLV) overlay
Attach a sheet of MLV (1–2 lb/sq ft) to the room-facing side of the door.
How to do it:
- Cut MLV to fit the door, leaving 5mm clearance at edges
- Apply construction adhesive to the door surface
- Press MLV onto the adhesive, smooth out air bubbles
- Screw through MLV into the door at edges and corners for permanent hold
- Seal edges with acoustic caulk
Cost: $40–$80 per door Expected improvement: 3–5 STC points on top of gap sealing Downsides: Adds weight (check hinges), not pretty without covering, may need to adjust latch strike plate due to added thickness
Option B: MDF panel overlay
Screw a 12mm MDF panel to the door face. Cheaper than MLV and adds meaningful mass.
Cost: $15–$25 Expected improvement: 2–4 STC points Downsides: Heavy, changes door appearance, may need third hinge
Option C: Green Glue + second panel
For maximum improvement, apply Green Glue damping compound between the existing door and an MDF panel. The damping layer converts vibration energy to heat.
Cost: $40–$60 Expected improvement: 5–8 STC points Best for: Doors where you’ve already sealed all gaps and need more
Step 3: Replace the door
If your door is hollow-core and you own the property, replacement is often the most practical path to significant improvement.
Solid-core doors (STC 30–35)
A solid-core door has a particleboard, MDF, or solid wood core. It typically weighs 25–35 kg (55–77 lbs) vs 12 kg (26 lbs) for hollow-core.
What to look for:
- Core material: Particleboard core is cheapest, solid wood core is heaviest (best for sound)
- Thickness: 44mm is standard, thicker is better
- Weight: Heavier = better. If the store has a display, try lifting it
- No glass inserts — glass panels dramatically reduce sound performance unless they’re laminated acoustic glass
Cost: $80–$250 for the door slab. Add $50–$150 for professional installation if you can’t hang it yourself.
Combined with full sealing: A solid-core door with auto drop seal, rubber weatherstripping, and sealed frame gaps can reach STC 35–40. That’s roughly equivalent to a standard interior wall.
Acoustic-rated doors (STC 40–55)
Purpose-built for sound isolation. They feature:
- Dense solid core (sometimes with lead or steel sheet inside)
- Perimeter compression seals on all four sides
- Automatic drop seal built into the bottom
- Heavy-duty hinges (three or more)
- Precise frame fit with minimal tolerances
Cost: $500–$3,000+ depending on STC rating and fire rating Best for: Home theaters, music studios, offices with confidentiality requirements
Quick Reference: Door Soundproofing by Budget
| Budget | What to do | Expected result |
|---|---|---|
| $0 | Towel under door, rearrange furniture | Slightly better |
| $15–$30 | Door sweep + weatherstripping | STC +3–8 from baseline |
| $50–$100 | Above + MLV overlay | STC +6–12 from baseline |
| $100–$300 | Solid-core door + full sealing | STC 35–40 total |
| $500–$3,000 | Acoustic-rated door | STC 40–55 total |
Common Mistakes
Using acoustic foam panels on the door. Acoustic foam absorbs echo inside a room — it does almost nothing to block sound transmission. Don’t waste your money.
Sealing the door too tight to close. Weatherstripping should compress when the door closes, not prevent it from closing. If you have to force the door shut, the weatherstripping is too thick.
Ignoring the wall next to the door. If you upgrade to an STC 45 acoustic door but the wall is STC 33, the wall is now the weak link. Test both to make sure you’re solving the right problem.
Forgetting the hinges. Adding MLV or MDF adds significant weight. Standard two-hinge doors may sag. Add a third hinge if the door weighs more than 25 kg (55 lbs) after modifications.
Measure Your Results
Test your door before and after improvements to see the actual difference. QuietScore makes this easy — run a test with the door as-is, make your improvements, then test again. Compare the scores and frequency breakdowns.
Pro tip: Also test with the door open vs. closed. If the closed-door score is only slightly better than open, you still have major leakage — probably air gaps that need sealing.
Next Steps
- How to Improve Your Soundproofing — Complete guide to all barriers
- How to Test Soundproofing at Home — Find your weak points
- Apartment Soundproofing on a Budget — Renter-friendly solutions
- Best Soundproofing Materials — Product recommendations