Decibel chart › Shouting or barking directly in the ear
How loud is shouting or barking directly in the ear?
Shouting or barking directly in the ear measures about 110 dB, roughly as loud as a chainsaw. At 110 dB it is at or above the 85 dB line where hearing damage starts: NIOSH puts the safe limit at about 1 minute a day. Normal conversation runs about 60 dB for comparison.
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| Decibel level | 110 dB |
|---|---|
| Hearing risk | High risk — Under 2 minutes of unprotected exposure per day (NIOSH) |
| Safe exposure (NIOSH) | About 1 minute a day |
| Typical setting | home |
Figures sourced to CDC. See the full decibel levels chart for every source.
How shouting or barking directly in the ear compares
On the decibel scale, 110 dB sits above the 85 dB line where sustained exposure damages hearing. Sounds at a similar level:
- Chainsaw 110 dB
- Personal listening device at max volume 105–110 dB
- Nightclub or loud bar 105–110 dB
- Rock concert 105–110 dB
How loud is shouting or barking directly in the ear?
Shouting or barking directly in the ear measures about 110 dB, roughly as loud as a chainsaw. At 110 dB it is at or above the 85 dB line where hearing damage starts: NIOSH puts the safe limit at about 1 minute a day. Normal conversation runs about 60 dB for comparison.
Is shouting or barking directly in the ear dangerous to hearing?
Yes — at 110 dB, shouting or barking directly in the ear is loud enough to damage hearing over time. NIOSH limits safe exposure to about 1 minute a day; use hearing protection beyond that.
Measure it yourself
Decibel levels vary with distance and surroundings. Check the real level where you are with the free online decibel meter — no install, nothing recorded — or see the full decibel levels chart.