Tinnitaid

tinnitus patient

Relief built for real life

Match your tone

Quickly detect and approximate the frequency you hear—then pick relief sounds aligned to it.

Relief anywhere

Use sound-based relief at work, in transit, or before sleep—no special equipment needed.

Doctor-led R&D

Built with ENT doctors, sound engineers, and researchers—grounded in therapy-inspired approaches.

How it works

1) Detect

Use the tone tool to approximate the pitch you’re perceiving.

2) Choose

Select relief sounds tailored around your tone and preference.

3) Routine

Build a simple daily habit and track progress over time.

If you have sudden hearing loss, severe dizziness, or one-sided tinnitus, seek medical care promptly.

Awards / Investors / Partners

Kifissia Award

1st prize — Kifissia (Greece) entrepreneurship competition (2020)

Accelerace

Selected for the Accelerace startup accelerator

Are you an investor or clinical partner?

Email [email protected]

FAQ

Will this cure tinnitus?

Is it safe?

Who is it for?

Get support & updates

Questions, feedback, or want early access updates? Send a message—we reply quickly.

Latest articles

  • Tinnitus and Self-Management

    Tinnitus is a very common experience, and although usually mild, in a significant proportion of people, it is intrusive, persistent, and disabling. This paper explores the lived experience of chronic disabling tinnitus, with the aim of understanding how distress and chronicity occur, and what might help to reduce this. It shows how a biopsychosocial approach to tinnitus may reduce tinnitus burden more effectively than a biomedical, diagnostic‐focused approach. • It indicates how effective early health care information could be used to reduce chronic tinnitus distress

    References: Marks, Elizabeth & Smith, Paula & McKenna, Laurence. (2019). Living with tinnitus and the health care journey: An interpretative phenomenological analysis. British Journal of Health Psychology. 24. 10.1111/bjhp.12351.

  • Tinnitus and Evidence-Based Guidelines

    Understanding tinnitus pathology has also been reported to be a therapeutically effective educational counseling strategy. Further, explaining how sound therapy such as tinnitus retraining therapy (TRT) works is effective. Psychological and cognitive behavioral therapies may be an option. Here, the hearing aid is coupled with a sound generator in order to administer sound therapy for patients with more-severe symptoms. TRT consists of educational counseling and sound therapy. The tinnitus handicap inventory (THI) is used to measure the distress level for tinnitus and to determine treatment priorities. Rehabilitation of tinnitus is important because anxiety and depression are often observed in patients with severe tinnitus.

    References: Kaoru Ogawa, Hiroaki Sato, Mariko Takahashi, Tetsuro Wada, Yasushi Naito, Tetsuaki Kawase, Shingo Murakami, Akira Hara, Sho Kanzaki, Clinical practice guidelines for diagnosis and treatment of chronic tinnitus in Japan, Auris Nasus Larynx, Volume 47, Issue 1, 2020, Pages 1-6, ISSN 0385-8146, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.anl.2019.09.007 (https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0385814619304481)