SOUNDSCAPE · WATER
Rain Sounds
Rain sounds reduce sleep-onset latency and perceived stress in controlled trials. The broadband, unpredictable-but-bounded character masks sudden noises (the #1 awakening trigger) without demanding cognitive attention, which is why rain outperforms silence for most sleepers.
Updated April 2026·4 min read
What you're listening to
Steady, moderately broad-spectrum rainfall — not too sharp, not too muffled. The mid-range water drops mask environmental noise (traffic, snoring, distant voices) while the irregular-but-bounded pattern prevents habituation. Loam's rain track is continuous with smooth loop points so you never hear the seam.
Why it works
Rain sits at a sweet spot that silent rooms don't: broadband enough to mask external noise, unpredictable enough that the auditory cortex can't fully predict it (preventing boredom-triggered wakings), but gentle enough that it doesn't command attention. Multiple studies on 'pink-noise-like' environmental masking find improved sleep continuity when rain or similar water sounds are present.
Relevant research: Zaccaro et al., 2018 (Frontiers in Human Neuroscience).
Best for
- sleep onset
- focus while reading or writing
- masking office noise
- calming anxious rumination
One caveat
If rain triggers urinary urgency (a documented association in some sleepers), try forest or brown noise instead — same masking effect, different frequency profile.
Variants in the Loam app
The full Loam library includes related variants you can mix into this base layer: rain on roof, rain on window, rain on tent, thunderstorm. All soundscapes can be layered together in the Sound Studio mixer with independent volume sliders.
Try it in the Loam app
Rain Sounds is included in Loam's soundscape library, with loop-seamless playback, an animated visualizer, and the option to layer up to five soundscapes simultaneously. Download Loam to listen.
Related soundscapes
Browse the full soundscape library, or try: Ocean Waves, Thunderstorm, Pink Noise, White Noise.