How binaural beats work
A binaural beat is created when two slightly different pure-tone frequencies are played separately into each ear — one tone in the left, a slightly different one in the right. Neither ear hears a "beat" on its own; the beat is a perceptual effect that occurs in the brain when it processes the two signals together. Play 200 Hz in one ear and 210 Hz in the other, and your brain perceives a 10 Hz beat.
Because the effect depends on each ear receiving a different signal, binaural beats require stereo headphones or earbuds. Played through a single speaker, both ears hear the same combined signal and the beat never forms.
How isochronic tones work
An isochronic tone is a single tone that's turned on and off at a regular rate — a tone that pulses at, say, 10 times per second rather than playing continuously. There's no illusion involved: the pulsing is physically present in the audio signal itself, the same in both ears.
Because the pulse is in the signal itself, isochronic tones work on speakers, in a car, or through a single earbud — no stereo separation required.
Which is more effective?
This is the question most people actually want answered, and the honest summary is: the research doesn't show a clear winner, but the two have different practical strengths.
- Isochronic tones produce a more pronounced, sharply-defined pulse, since the on/off pattern is directly in the waveform. Some listeners find this makes the rhythm easier to "lock onto," but the same sharpness can also feel more abrasive to others, especially at higher volumes.
- Binaural beats tend to feel smoother and less obtrusive, since the beat is a subtler perceptual effect layered under the tones rather than an audible on/off pulse. The tradeoff is the headphone requirement and that the effect can be less noticeable for people with significant hearing differences between ears.
Neither has a strong evidence base showing it reliably outperforms the other for entrainment outcomes. The more consistent factor across studies is consistent use and a quiet listening environment — which makes the practical question ("can I use headphones right now?") often more decisive than the theoretical one.
Which to use in different situations
- At a desk with headphones: either works well. Binaural beats are a good default if you find the isochronic pulse distracting.
- In a shared space, on speakers, or driving: isochronic tones are the only option that will actually produce the entrainment effect — binaural beats on a single speaker just sound like a slightly detuned tone.
- Falling asleep: isochronic tones avoid the need to wear headphones to bed. See our sleep guide for a full session structure.
- Deep focus work: binaural beats paired with a soundscape are a common choice when headphones are already part of the setup. See our focus guide.
Can you combine them?
Yes — some sessions layer an isochronic pulse with a binaural beat at the same target frequency, on the theory that the two entrainment mechanisms reinforce each other. There's no strong evidence this is more effective than either alone, but it's not harmful either; if you're on headphones and want to experiment, it's a reasonable thing to try.