That Ringing in Your Ears Has a Name — and Usually an Explanation
Suddenly noticing a ringing, buzzing, or hissing sound in your ears — especially when it won’t stop — can be unsettling. You are not alone: tinnitus affects roughly 14.4% of adults globally, making it one of the most common auditory complaints people bring to their doctor (Jarach et al., 2022). For most people, there is a clear, identifiable cause. This article explains the most common causes, helps you understand what your specific experience might indicate, and makes clear when a GP visit is the right next step.
So Why Are Your Ears Ringing?
In most cases, ringing ears trace back to some disruption of the tiny sensory hair cells inside your inner ear. These cells convert sound vibrations into electrical signals that travel to your brain. When they are damaged or reduced in number, the brain no longer receives the input it expects — and it compensates by increasing its own internal activity. That internally generated noise is what you hear as ringing, buzzing, or hissing.
The most common trigger is noise exposure: a loud concert, power tools, or earphones turned up too high. Age-related hearing loss runs a close second. Both gradually deplete hair cell function over time. Less commonly, earwax blockage, certain medications, or underlying health conditions are responsible.
Tinnitus is most often caused by inner ear hair cell disruption from noise or age-related hearing loss. It is extremely common and, in many cases, either self-resolving or manageable with the right support.
The Most Common Causes of Ear Ringing
Rather than listing causes in isolation, it helps to group them by what they typically mean for you — and what to do next.
Group 1: Temporary and likely self-resolving
These causes usually produce short-lived tinnitus that fades once the trigger is removed.
Noise exposure (temporary threshold shift): Leaving a concert or noisy venue with ringing ears is extremely common. The hair cells have been overstimulated but not permanently damaged — the ringing typically fades within hours. If it persists beyond 48 hours, the situation changes (more on this below).
Earwax blockage: A build-up of earwax pressing against the eardrum can produce ringing or muffled hearing. Once the wax is removed professionally, the tinnitus usually resolves.
Ear infection or fluid: Middle ear infections and fluid behind the eardrum alter how sound pressure reaches the inner ear, sometimes causing temporary ringing. Treating the infection typically resolves the symptom.
Stress and fatigue: Heightened stress can increase awareness of bodily sounds, including low-level tinnitus that might otherwise go unnoticed. Sleep deprivation makes this worse. Addressing the underlying stress tends to reduce the perception.
Group 2: Ongoing but manageable
These causes tend to produce tinnitus that persists, but many respond well to management strategies.
Age-related hearing loss (presbycusis): Gradual hair cell loss over decades is the most common cause of chronic tinnitus in older adults (Jarach et al., 2022). Hearing aids often reduce tinnitus perception alongside improving hearing.
Noise-induced hearing loss: Repeated or sustained loud noise exposure causes permanent hair cell damage. Tinnitus in this context may be long-term, but sound therapy and other approaches can reduce its impact on daily life.
Medication side effects: A range of medicines can cause or worsen tinnitus — including high-dose aspirin, some NSAIDs, certain antibiotics (particularly aminoglycosides), and some diuretics and chemotherapy drugs. If you suspect a medication is responsible, speak to your prescribing doctor before stopping anything.
Menière’s disease: This inner ear condition causes episodes of vertigo, fluctuating hearing loss, and tinnitus. It is less common than noise-induced tinnitus but well-recognised, and there are treatments to reduce episode frequency.
TMJ dysfunction: The jaw joint sits close to the ear canal. Problems with the temporomandibular joint can refer symptoms to the ear, including ringing. Dental or physiotherapy treatment aimed at the jaw can improve tinnitus in these cases.
Group 3: Needs prompt attention
These presentations should not wait for a routine appointment.
Pulsatile tinnitus: If the sound you hear pulses in time with your heartbeat, this is different from the typical constant ringing. It can indicate abnormal blood flow near the ear — including vascular abnormalities that need imaging to evaluate. Serhal et al. (2022) classify sudden-onset pulsatile tinnitus as requiring immediate emergency assessment.
Sudden onset in one ear, with hearing loss: Sudden sensorineural hearing loss is an otological emergency. The window for corticosteroid treatment is short — ideally within 72 hours of onset (Serhal et al., 2022). If you wake up with one ear significantly worse than the other, seek same-day medical attention.
Tinnitus after a head injury: Research confirms that traumatic brain injury can cause tinnitus independently of any peripheral hearing damage (Le et al., 2024). New tinnitus following a head injury requires medical evaluation.
What’s Actually Happening in Your Ear (and Brain)
Understanding why tinnitus happens helps make sense of an experience that can otherwise feel mysterious and frightening.
Your inner ear contains thousands of hair cells arranged along a structure called the cochlea. Each cluster of hair cells is tuned to a specific frequency. When those cells are damaged — by loud noise, ageing, or other causes — they send fewer or distorted signals up the auditory nerve to your brain.
The brain’s auditory cortex, which expects a steady stream of input, responds to this reduction by turning up its own sensitivity. Think of it like a stereo amplifier that automatically increases its gain when the input signal drops. The result is that neurons in your central auditory system become more spontaneously active, generating signals that weren’t produced by any external sound. That internally generated activity is what you perceive as ringing.
This mechanism — described in detail by Roberts (2018) — is known as central gain increase, or homeostatic plasticity. It explains something that surprises many people: tinnitus is fundamentally a brain phenomenon, not purely an ear problem. This is why the ringing often continues even after the original trigger (a noise event, an infection) has long passed. The peripheral damage has been done; the brain’s compensatory response persists.
It also explains why tinnitus frequently accompanies hearing loss. According to the ATA, around 90% of people with tinnitus have some degree of hearing change, even if they haven’t been formally diagnosed with it.
Temporary Ringing vs. Persistent Tinnitus: How to Tell the Difference
Brief episodes of ear ringing — lasting a few seconds or minutes — are common and almost always benign. Most people experience them occasionally with no underlying significance.
The situation is different when tinnitus follows a specific trigger, like a loud noise event. According to the American Tinnitus Association, when noise-induced tinnitus hasn’t resolved within 48 hours, the auditory system may have sustained more significant injury, and a GP or ENT assessment is worthwhile (American Tinnitus Association). This 48-hour figure is a practical guide based on clinical experience rather than the result of a controlled trial, but it maps closely to how primary care guidelines approach the question of when to act.
Persistent tinnitus is defined clinically as lasting three months or more. At that point, the focus shifts from identifying a reversible cause to understanding the tinnitus and managing its impact. The earlier that process begins, the better — early assessment gives the best chance of identifying any treatable contributing factor before it becomes entrenched.
If your tinnitus started more than a week ago and shows no sign of fading, a visit to your GP is a reasonable next step even if none of the red flag signs below apply to you.
Red Flags: When to Seek Help Urgently
Most tinnitus is not dangerous, and this section should not cause alarm. The following patterns are worth knowing precisely because they are different from typical tinnitus — and because early assessment genuinely changes outcomes.
Pulsatile tinnitus (ringing or whooshing that beats in sync with your heartbeat): This can indicate abnormal blood flow near the ear, including arteriovenous malformations or other vascular findings. Sudden-onset pulsatile tinnitus warrants emergency evaluation (Serhal et al., 2022). The American Academy of Otolaryngology recommends imaging for pulsatile tinnitus as standard practice (American Academy of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery).
Sudden hearing loss in one ear: If you notice significant hearing loss in one ear — particularly if it came on overnight or over a few hours — this is a medical emergency. Sudden sensorineural hearing loss (SSNHL) is treatable with corticosteroids, but the treatment window is short. Serhal et al. (2022) recommend ENT referral within 24 hours for tinnitus with sudden-onset hearing loss occurring within the last 30 days.
Tinnitus with neurological symptoms: If tinnitus is accompanied by facial weakness, sudden vertigo, difficulty swallowing, or any sign of stroke, seek emergency care immediately (National Institute for Health and Care Excellence, 2020).
Tinnitus following head injury: New tinnitus after any head trauma warrants evaluation, even if the injury seemed minor (Le et al., 2024).
For all other presentations — constant ringing in both ears, tinnitus that has built up gradually, tinnitus that fluctuates with stress or tiredness — a standard GP appointment is appropriate rather than urgent.
If your tinnitus pulses with your heartbeat, came on suddenly in one ear with hearing loss, or followed a head injury, contact a doctor the same day or go to an emergency department.
Key Takeaways
Ringing ears is one of the most common auditory complaints there is — affecting around 1 in 7 adults (Jarach et al., 2022). In the large majority of cases, it traces back to inner ear disruption from noise exposure or age-related changes, and it is not a sign of anything dangerous.
Knowing which category your experience falls into — temporary, ongoing but manageable, or one of the specific red-flag patterns — is the most useful first step you can take. If the ringing has lasted more than 48 hours, a GP visit is worthwhile: early assessment identifies any treatable cause and opens the most options. For the vast majority of people, tinnitus is not a signal of serious disease — but you don’t have to leave it unexamined.
