How to Improve Your Home Office Acoustics: A Complete Guide
Working from home has become a permanent arrangement for millions of people, and for most, the room they work in was never designed with acoustics in mind. Spare bedrooms, converted loft spaces, and garden offices share one common problem: sound bounces around freely, making it harder to concentrate, harder to communicate clearly on calls, and harder to feel settled in your work. This guide covers everything you need to know about treating your home office acoustically, from understanding how sound behaves in small rooms to choosing the right panels, rafts, and baffles for your setup.

Why Poor Acoustics Affect Your Work More Than You Realise
Most people associate bad acoustics with large, echoey spaces like sports halls or empty restaurants. But small rooms with hard, reflective surfaces have their own acoustic problems, and a home office is a prime example. A room with painted plaster walls, a wooden floor, glass windows, and a desk against a hard wall will reflect sound back and forth rapidly, creating a buildup of noise that can feel fatiguing even when the room is quiet.

The effects are practical as well as psychological. Speech intelligibility drops when reverberation is high, meaning your voice sounds muddy on video calls. Background noise from other parts of the house becomes more noticeable when there's nothing absorbing it. And sustained exposure to a reverberant environment increases cognitive load, even when you're not actively aware of it. Improving acoustics addresses all of these problems at once.
If you're setting up a workspace elsewhere in your home, the same principles apply. You can explore acoustic solutions for homes and apartments more broadly, or look at purpose-specific treatments for living room workspaces if your setup isn't a dedicated room.
How Sound Behaves in a Typical Home Office
When sound is generated in a room, it travels outward in all directions. Hard surfaces like walls, ceilings, floors, and glass reflect it back with very little energy lost. In a room with no soft furnishings, sound can bounce many times before it dies away, producing what's measured as reverberation time. The longer the reverberation time, the more muddled the acoustic environment becomes.

Home offices are often stripped-back spaces compared to living rooms, which tend to have soft furniture, curtains, and carpets that absorb some of this energy naturally. A dedicated office with hard floors, bare walls, and a desk facing a window can have reverberation times significantly higher than what's comfortable for focused work or clear communication.
The solution isn't to cover every surface, but to add enough absorption in the right places to bring reverberation time down to a comfortable level. This is where acoustic panels, ceiling rafts, and baffles come in. You can browse the full range of available treatments in the complete acoustics collection to get a sense of what's available across different product types.
Acoustic Wall Panels: The Most Accessible Starting Point
Wall panels are usually the first thing people consider, and for good reason. They're straightforward to install, they come in a wide variety of sizes and fabrics, and they can be positioned strategically to target the most reflective surfaces in a room. Placing panels on the wall opposite your desk, on side walls, or around the area where you typically take calls will have a noticeable impact.

Fabric-wrapped panels are a popular choice because they combine effective sound absorption with a clean, finished appearance. The SilentSpace range of fabric-wrapped panels comes in rectangle, square, and circle formats in multiple sizes, making it easy to work with whatever wall space you have available. The fabric surface can be colour-matched to your décor, so the panels don't have to look like an afterthought.
For something with more texture and visual character, the Autex 'Mirage' and 'Cube' PET panels offer absorption alongside a more tactile, design-led surface finish. PET felt panels are made from recycled materials and are a good choice if sustainability is a consideration in your purchasing decisions.

Installation is generally simple. Most panels can be fixed with adhesive strips or light wall fixings, meaning you don't need specialist tools or skills. If you're renting and can't fix anything to the walls permanently, freestanding options and leaning panels are also worth considering. Browse the full selection of acoustic wall panels to compare formats, sizes, and finishes.
Acoustic Ceiling Panels and Suspended Rafts
The ceiling is one of the most acoustically significant surfaces in a room because it's large, hard, and directly above the source of most sound. Yet it's also the most commonly overlooked surface when people start treating a home office. Adding absorption overhead, whether through ceiling-mounted panels or suspended rafts, can produce a dramatic improvement in clarity and comfort.
Suspended rafts hang from the ceiling on discreet wires and absorb sound from both sides, making them considerably more efficient per unit area than flat ceiling tiles. They work particularly well in rooms with higher ceilings where there's space to drop them without affecting headroom.

The SilentSpace range includes fabric-wrapped rafts in both rectangle and circle formats at multiple sizes. These are a practical and cost-effective way to add overhead absorption without a complex installation. The circle format in particular works well visually in a smaller room where a large rectangular raft might feel overwhelming.
For a more refined finish, the BAUX 'Wood Wool' ceiling panels are worth considering. Made from wood wool bound with cement, they offer both absorption and a warm, textured surface that suits contemporary interiors. They're available in 1200 x 600mm ceiling tile format, making them compatible with standard grid ceiling systems if your home office has a suspended ceiling.

You can find the complete range of suspended and fixed options in the acoustic ceiling panels collection.
Ecophon Solo Rafts: A Premium Ceiling Solution
The Ecophon Solo series represents one of the most trusted names in suspended acoustic ceiling products. The Solo range is used across professional offices, healthcare environments, and education settings, but it's equally well suited to a home office where you want a clean, high-performance solution that doesn't compromise on appearance.

The Ecophon Solo Square is a 1200 x 1200mm frameless raft with an Akutex FT surface finish. It's available in multiple colours, suspends on discreet wires, and comes with all the fixation hardware included. The frameless design gives it a minimal look that fits naturally into a modern home office without looking industrial. Priced at £175 per panel, it's a considered investment that delivers measurable acoustic improvement.

The Ecophon Solo Circle is available in Ø800mm and Ø1200mm diameters and comes in packs of four panels with fixation hardware included. The circular format softens the geometry of a room and works well as a focal point above a desk or seating area. Both Solo formats offer an effective and cost-conscious acoustic solution, with the Circle variant being a particularly good option for smaller home offices where a large rectangular raft would dominate the ceiling.
Acoustic Ceiling Baffles for Home Offices
Baffles are a different approach to ceiling acoustics. Rather than horizontal panels sitting parallel to the ceiling, baffles hang vertically in rows, absorbing sound as it passes through the gaps between them. This gives them a high effective surface area relative to the ceiling space they occupy, making them efficient in rooms where you can't or don't want to cover large areas of the ceiling.

The Ecophon Solo Baffle is a Class A absorber with the same Akutex FT surface used across the Solo range. It suspends vertically from the ceiling and can be configured in adjustable arrangements depending on the space. Priced at £499 per pack, this is a serious acoustic product for home offices where performance is the priority. Fixings are included.
The SilentSpace fabric-wrapped ceiling baffles offer a similar vertical format at a more accessible price point and in a wider range of fabric colours, making them a practical choice for home offices where aesthetics matter as much as acoustic performance.

The full selection of suspended baffle products is available in the acoustic ceiling baffles collection, including both fabric-wrapped and PET felt variants across multiple sizes.
Acoustic Screens and Desk Dividers
If your home office is part of a larger open-plan space, or if you share a room with other people, freestanding acoustic screens offer a targeted solution. They work by absorbing sound close to the source, reducing how much travels across the room in the first place.

Screens are also useful in front of windows, where hard glass surfaces cause significant sound reflection. Positioning an acoustic screen perpendicular to a window can help break up the reflection path without covering the glass entirely. Browse the acoustic screens collection for freestanding and desk-mounted options suited to home working environments.
Acoustic Panels That Work as Wall Art
One of the most practical developments in acoustic design is the printed panel. Rather than a plain fabric surface, these panels carry photographic or artistic prints directly on the acoustic material, effectively functioning as both wall art and acoustic treatment. For a home office where you've put thought into how the room looks, this is a neat way to add absorption without making the space feel clinical.

The SilentSpace Printed Art Acoustic Panels are available in multiple sizes and can be produced with custom imagery, making it possible to have panels that reflect your own aesthetic rather than a generic manufacturer's palette. They retain the same core acoustic performance as the standard SilentSpace fabric range.
For something more architectural, the Abstracta 'Sahara' panels and acoustic slat wall panels in the Eco Sound range add visual depth to a wall while absorbing mid to high frequency sound. The Eco Sound acoustic slat wall panels, measuring 3000 x 600mm, work particularly well across an entire feature wall, creating the kind of warm, textured interior surface that a home office benefits from both acoustically and visually.


Acoustic Lighting: Combining Function with Acoustics
Several products in the range integrate acoustic absorption directly into lighting fixtures, which is an efficient way to treat a space without dedicating additional wall or ceiling area to panels alone. These products absorb sound through the body of the fitting itself, making productive use of the ceiling space that a pendant light would occupy anyway.

The Impact Acoustic 'Spark' acoustic lighting and the Abstracta 'Vika' acoustic lamp absorber are both designed with this dual purpose in mind. The De Vorm 'Pivot' adjustable acoustic lamp adds flexibility to the concept, allowing you to direct both light and acoustic absorption where they're needed most. For a home office where adding panels might feel too conspicuous, acoustic lighting can provide a more integrated solution.

How to Plan Your Home Office Acoustic Treatment
There's no single formula for treating a home office because every room is different. That said, a few practical principles apply across most situations.
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Start with the most reflective surfaces. Bare plaster walls, ceilings, and floors are the primary culprits. Address at least two of these before considering anything else.
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Target the first reflection points. Sound from your speakers or your voice will reflect off the wall directly to the side of you and the ceiling directly above. Placing panels at these points has a disproportionate effect on clarity.
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Aim for balanced coverage. Covering one wall entirely while leaving all others bare will produce an uneven acoustic environment. Spread absorption across different surfaces and positions in the room.
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Combine panel types. Using a mix of wall panels, ceiling rafts, and possibly baffles addresses sound coming from different angles and gives a more complete treatment than relying on one product type alone.
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Don't over-treat. A completely dead room is uncomfortable in its own way. The goal is to reduce excess reverberation, not eliminate all reflections.
If your needs extend beyond a single home office, the same principles apply in larger professional settings. The commercial office acoustic panels collection covers a broader range of solutions for open-plan and multi-desk environments, including larger format panels and more extensive baffle systems.
Materials: What to Look for When Choosing Acoustic Panels
Not all acoustic panels are made from the same materials, and the differences matter both in terms of performance and practicality.
Fabric-wrapped panels use a rigid core, typically glass wool, rock wool, or polyester fibre, wrapped in an acoustic-transparent fabric. The fabric has no effect on sound absorption but allows sound waves to pass through to the core where they're absorbed. These are among the most effective products for broadband sound absorption and can be made to look exactly as you want them to.
PET felt panels are made from recycled plastic bottles and offer good mid to high frequency absorption. They're lighter than fabric-wrapped panels, easier to cut to custom sizes, and visually distinctive. Products like the Autex range and the BAUX X-FELT panels fall into this category.
Glass wool products such as the Ecophon range provide very high levels of absorption, particularly at low frequencies. The Ecophon Solo rafts and baffles use a glass wool core with a durable Akutex FT surface that's both cleanable and suitable for humid environments.
Wood wool panels such as the BAUX 'Wood Wool' ceiling tiles offer a different acoustic character and a natural, warm aesthetic. They're particularly effective at diffusing as well as absorbing sound, making them useful in rooms where you want to retain some liveness rather than damping everything down.
For home studios where more precise acoustic control is needed, separate guidance applies. The music studio acoustic panels collection covers specialist products suited to recording and listening environments.
Easy Installation: Getting Panels Up Without Disruption
Most acoustic wall panels can be installed without professional help. Fabric-wrapped panels at smaller sizes can be fixed with heavy-duty adhesive strips, meaning no drilling or wall damage. Larger panels and ceiling products typically require fixings into the wall or ceiling, but the hardware is usually included and the process is straightforward.
Suspended rafts like the Ecophon Solo range use discreet stainless steel wires with ceiling anchors. The anchors require drilling, but the installation process is well documented and the components are designed for straightforward self-installation. All fixation hardware is supplied with the product.
Where walls can't be drilled, freestanding products and leaning panels provide an alternative. Acoustic screens are self-supporting and can be repositioned as needed, which is particularly useful in rented spaces. The ceiling baffles collection includes products designed for quick, reversible installation suitable for home environments.
Conclusion
Getting the acoustics right in a home office is one of the most effective improvements you can make to your working environment, and it doesn't require a complete renovation. A combination of wall panels, ceiling rafts, and appropriate furnishings can reduce reverberation, improve speech clarity on calls, and make long hours at the desk considerably more comfortable.
The range of products available means there's a practical solution for every type of home office, from a small spare room to a purpose-built garden studio. Whether you start with a few fabric-wrapped wall panels or opt for a suspended raft system like the Ecophon Solo series, the results are measurable and immediate.
Browse the full home office acoustic panels collection to find products suited to your specific room, budget, and aesthetic preferences, or explore the complete acoustics range if you want to see everything available across all product types and formats.
