How to Soundproof Walls in Canadian Homes
A practical overview of wall soundproofing methods used in Canadian residential construction, covering mass, decoupling, and absorption strategies for different wall types.
Acoustic Insulation Resource — Canada
A reference on soundproofing methods, materials, and installation practices for walls, ceilings, and floors in residential settings across Canada.
Key Topics
Noise enters and travels through buildings via multiple paths. The guides below address the most common situations in Canadian residential construction.
Shared walls between units, party walls in semi-detached homes, and exterior walls facing street or transit noise. Techniques include decoupling, mass addition, and absorption layers.
Impact noise from upper floors is a common issue in Canadian multi-storey construction. Resilient channels, floating floors, and mass-loaded vinyl address different transmission paths.
Mineral wool, cellulose, and acoustic batts each have different STC and NRC ratings. Choosing the right material depends on the assembly type and the noise frequencies involved.
Sound bypasses walls through structural connections, gaps around pipes, and HVAC ducts. Identifying flanking routes is often as important as treating the primary surface.
The National Building Code of Canada sets minimum STC requirements for separating assemblies in multi-unit residential buildings. Provincial and municipal codes may apply additional requirements.
Canadian winters create pressure differentials that affect air sealing performance. Acoustic gaps and thermal gaps are sometimes addressed together during renovation.
Articles
The articles below cover specific aspects of residential soundproofing with details relevant to Canadian homes and construction practices.
A practical overview of wall soundproofing methods used in Canadian residential construction, covering mass, decoupling, and absorption strategies for different wall types.
Impact and airborne noise travel differently through horizontal assemblies. This guide examines the most effective ceiling and floor treatments for multi-storey Canadian homes.
Mineral wool, cellulose, fiberglass, and acoustic foam each serve different roles. This comparison looks at STC performance, installation requirements, and typical Canadian applications.
Background
In Canada, noise-related complaints are among the more common issues raised in multi-unit residential buildings. The primary sources vary: mechanical systems, neighbour activity, street traffic, and proximity to transit corridors each contribute differently depending on the building type and location.
The National Building Code of Canada (NBC) includes requirements for Sound Transmission Class (STC) ratings in assemblies separating dwelling units. For walls and floors between units, the NBC sets a minimum STC of 47, though many acoustic consultants recommend higher values in practice.
Older housing stock — particularly pre-1980 construction in cities like Toronto, Montreal, and Vancouver — was built to different standards. Retrofitting these buildings for improved acoustic performance is a common renovation goal.
STC 25: Normal speech understood easily. STC 35: Loud speech audible. STC 45: Loud speech not intelligible. STC 55: Most sounds inaudible. The NBC minimum of STC 47 falls between the last two categories.
IIC measures resistance to impact-generated noise such as footsteps. The NBC requires a minimum IIC of 47 for floor-ceiling assemblies between units. Floating floor systems can significantly raise IIC values.
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