Yes, children do benefit from earplugs during air travel, and pediatric audiologists and family medicine physicians consistently recommend hearing protection for kids aged 3 and up when flying.
Children need ear protection at sports events because stadium noise levels often exceed safe hearing thresholds and can cause permanent hearing damage.
Earplugs can reduce the intensity of auditory input that reaches an autistic child’s brain, and for many children on the autism spectrum, that reduction is enough to prevent a full sensory meltdown before it begins.
Children’s ears are more sensitive than adults’. The World Health Organisation recommends that children are not exposed to sound levels above 75 decibels over extended periods, compared to 80 decibels for adults. That gap matters more than most parents realise.
Children’s ears are more sensitive than adults. Their auditory system is still developing, which makes it more vulnerable to damage from loud environments. Most experts agree that prolonged exposure to sound above 85 decibels (dB) can lead to permanent hearing damage.
Children with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) do not struggle in class because they are not trying. They struggle because the classroom, as it is typically designed, generates a level of continuous background noise that their nervous system cannot filter the way a neurotypical child’s brain can.
Every parent has handed their child a tablet with headphones on a long car ride and thought nothing of it. Most of us have taken our kids to a birthday party, a sports event, or a fireworks show without once checking how loud it actually was.
Earplugs for kids are safe when the type, size and supervision match the child’s age and ear anatomy. Pediatric audiology guidance, product specifications for child‑sized earplugs, and parental safety recommendations all agree on one core principle: children have smaller and more sensitive ear canals, so hearing protection must be adapted rather than downsized from adult products.
Ear tubes are commonly placed in children and sometimes adults to relieve pressure and drain fluid from the middle ear.
Swimming is one of the most common questions parents ask after their child gets ear tubes. The good news is that in most cases, children with ear tubes can still enjoy the water. The key is understanding when swimming is safe, when extra protection is recommended, and how to reduce the risk of infections.









