Struggling with noisy neighbors or thin walls? Try these real-life sleep fixes, from earplugs to routines, so you can actually rest.
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Get it on Play StoreI’ve had nights where a neighbor decided 11:47 p.m. was the perfect time to drag furniture around like they were rearranging a warehouse. And honestly? It can mess with your whole next day.
Sleep loss from noise is real, not “just annoying.” Your brain stays half-alert, your body doesn’t fully relax, and then you wake up weirdly angry at everyone and everything. So if you live in a noisy apartment or have loud neighbors, the goal isn’t to “tough it out” — it’s to build a system that protects your sleep.
And yes, this sounds obvious, but most people skip the basics.
Foam earplugs are the cheapest sleep upgrade on earth. A decent pack usually costs less than one takeout meal, and if you use them correctly, they can make a huge difference. Roll them tight, pull your ear up and back, and let them expand inside your ear — don’t just shove them in.
If you hate the feeling of earplugs, try silicone earplugs or sleep headphones. I used to think sleep headphones were gimmicky, but if you’re sensitive to random bangs, they can be a lifesaver.
And if you wear earplugs, make sure they’re comfortable enough to keep in all night. The “best” solution is useless if you rip it out by midnight.
I’m a big fan of white noise, and I’ll die on this hill: it works because it makes sudden sounds less shocking.
A fan, white noise machine, rain sounds, or even an air purifier can help smooth out the random noise spikes from neighbors, traffic, or hallway chaos. The trick is consistency — you want a steady background sound, not a playlist that changes every 30 seconds.
Try this:
And if white noise annoys you, try brown noise or pink noise instead. Some people find them less sharp and easier to fall asleep to.
Your room should feel like a cave that doesn’t care what your building is doing.
Blackout curtains help more than people think. They don’t just block light — they make the room feel quieter and more enclosed. Add a door draft stopper or even a rolled towel under the door if hallway noise is bleeding in.
Also, cut down on anything that reflects sound:
No, it won’t turn your apartment into a recording studio. But it can take the edge off enough that you stop waking up every time someone drops a glass upstairs.
And this part matters more than people think: your brain loves patterns.
If your bed becomes the place where you scroll, stress, snack, and negotiate with fate, your body won’t treat it like a sleep zone. Keep your bed for sleep and sex only if you can. That’s it.
A simple wind-down routine helps too:
I’ve noticed that when my routine is sloppy, the outside noise feels twice as loud. But when I’ve already started winding down properly, random apartment noise bothers me less because my body is already halfway asleep.
This sounds a little woo-woo, but it’s practical: the more you panic about noise, the more awake you get.
If a noise wakes you up, don’t immediately check the time. That tiny habit can trigger the “oh great, now I’ll be tired tomorrow” spiral. Instead:
And if you’re awake for more than about 20 minutes, get out of bed briefly. Sit somewhere dim, do something boring, and return when you feel sleepy again. Lying there furious at a neighbor won’t help — trust me, I’ve tried.
Not every loud neighbor is a villain. Some people are just oblivious.
If it feels safe, talk to them during the day, not when you’re already sleep-deprived and ready to snap. Keep it short and specific:
And if you want better results, be polite but clear. People respond better to specifics than to vague complaints.
If that doesn’t work, document the dates and times. Then talk to your landlord, building manager, or housing office. Patterns matter. One random loud night is annoying; repeated disturbance is a housing issue.
This is one of my favorite tricks.
If your apartment tends to get noisy at a certain time — say, kids running in the hall at 8 p.m. or a neighbor’s music at midnight — don’t wait until the noise starts. Build a buffer routine before it hits.
Try this:
You’re basically getting ahead of the chaos. It’s not glamorous, but it works.
And this part is sneaky. Sometimes the loud environment isn’t the only problem — your sleep setup is making it worse.
Check these:
If you’re already sleep-deprived, even one espresso too late can make you more sensitive to noise. I’m not saying give up joy forever. I’m saying maybe don’t sabotage yourself and then blame the neighbor.
Some nights will still be bad. That’s life.
So have a backup plan for the next day:
Do not try to “catch up” by sleeping until noon if you can help it. That usually makes the next night worse, and then you’re stuck in the same stupid loop.
And if you’re tracking habits, this is exactly where something like Trider (myhabits.in) can help — not because it magically cancels noise, but because it keeps your sleep routine from falling apart after one bad night.
Sometimes the issue is bigger than “my neighbors are annoying.”
If noise is happening constantly and it’s affecting your health, mood, work, or ability to function, take it seriously. Chronic sleep disruption can build up fast. If you’re getting headaches, major daytime sleepiness, anxiety, or you’re waking up multiple times every night for weeks, it may be worth talking to a doctor too.
And if the noise is extreme or feels unsafe, don’t just suffer in silence. Use building management, local rules, or tenant support resources if they’re available where you live.
Because it does.
You don’t need the perfect apartment to sleep better. You need a few solid tools — earplugs, white noise, a boring bedroom, a calm routine, and a plan for bad nights. Stack those together and you’ll usually sleep way better than you did before.
And if you want help sticking to the habits that make sleep actually happen, try Trider at myhabits.in — it’s a simple way to keep your nighttime routine on track without overthinking it.