A white noise machine is one of the cheapest upgrades you can make to your sleep, and one of the few that works the first night. The trick is they arent all the same. Some play a real fan blowing, others loop a short audio clip that your brain picks up on after a while, and a couple try to be a whole bedside setup with lights and alarms.
We sorted through the ones people actually keep on their nightstand a year later. A looping clip with an obvious seam is the thing to avoid, because once you hear the loop you cant unhear it. Prices shift, so treat these as a rough guide.
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This is the one I recommend without much hedging. It generates its sounds instead of looping a clip, so theres no seam for your brain to latch onto at 3am. You get ten fan sounds and a bunch of white, pink, and brown noise variations, which sounds like overkill until you find the exact one that knocks you out. Small enough to pack, runs on USB, and the volume goes higher than youd think. The buttons glow a little in the dark, which bugs some people.
Best real fan sound, a physical motor not a speaker
9.0(80,000+ reviews)
Real fan
Sound source
2 speeds
Tone dial
Analog
No app
1yr
Warranty
True fanSimple
The Dohm has been around for decades and theres a reason. Theres an actual fan spinning inside, so the sound is the real deal, that soft rushing-air tone with zero digital edge to it. You twist the cap to change the pitch. No sounds to scroll through, no timer, no app, you just turn it on. If electronic noise machines have always sounded a bit fake to you, this fixes that. The catch is it only does the one sound, so if you want rain or ocean, look elsewhere.
The Restore 2 wants to be your whole bedside table. It does noise, sure, but it also fakes a sunrise to wake you up gently and runs a wind-down routine at night. That combo is genuinely nice if you hate jarring alarms. The honest downside is the best content sits behind a subscription, which feels cheap on a $170 device. If you just want noise, the LectroFan is a quarter of the price. Buy this for the light and routines, not the sound alone.
For twenty bucks the Magicteam is a no-brainer if youre just testing whether noise helps you sleep at all. It packs 20 sounds, remembers your last setting, and has a timer. Some of the sounds do loop and a couple are obviously fake, but the plain white and brown noise tracks are perfectly fine, and thats what most people use anyway. Great one to buy for a kids room or a guest room without overthinking it.
If you sleep badly in hotels, the Rohm earns its keep fast. Its about the size of a hockey puck, charges over USB, and has a loop strap so you can hang it off a stroller or a bunk. Only three sounds and the battery wont run all night on every trip, but it covers the hum of a strange room or a noisy hallway. I keep one in my carry-on and barely notice its there until I need it.
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If you sleep next to someone, a non-looping machine like the LectroFan or a real-fan Dohm tends to keep the peace better, since the looping cheap ones can grate on a light sleeper. Pair one with good blackout and youve covered the two biggest bedroom annoyances at once, which is exactly why we keep harping on our blackout sleep mask picks alongside sound.