How to Clean iPhone Speakers

how to clean iphone speakers

Cleaning iPhone speakers isn’t glamorous, but it’s one of those tiny chores that makes a massive difference. Over the years, I’ve had moments where my iPhone suddenly sounded muffled, calls were hard to hear, music lost its clarity, and I thought something had broken inside. Spoiler: the phone was fine — the speaker was just clogged with pocket lint, dust, moisture residue, or plain old grime. Once I cleaned it, everything worked perfectly again.

In this article, I’ll walk you through how to clean iPhone speakers properly, safely, and without damaging anything. I’ll also bust a few myths, list what NOT to do, and give you a few surprisingly effective tricks I’ve picked up from personal experience.

And just to be clear: I’m not an Apple technician. I’m just someone who’s cleaned a lot of iPhones over the years and learned what works — and what ruins your speakers.


Why iPhone Speakers Get Dirty (and Why It Matters)

If your phone travels everywhere you do — pockets, bags, cars, gym sessions, pubs, hikes through the Cotswolds — your speaker grills are basically lint collectors. They accumulate:

  • Dust and fabric particles from pockets
  • Dead skin flakes (yes, we shed constantly)
  • Oil from fingers
  • Moisture residue from humidity or rain
  • Food particles if you use your phone while eating (most people do)
  • Hair and fibres from clothes and bedding

Your iPhone has two main speaker areas:

  • The bottom speaker grills (these are the “loud” ones)
  • The earpiece speaker at the top (the one you listen to during calls)

Both can get blocked, which causes:

ProblemWhat It Really Means
Muffled soundDust is covering the grill openings
Distorted soundDebris is vibrating against the mesh
Low call volumeThe top speaker is clogged
CracklingMoisture dried in the mesh
No soundBlockage is extreme or hardware fault

Before assuming your iPhone needs repair, it’s worth trying a proper clean. It’s amazing how often that fixes it.


Tools You Can (and Should) Use

Cleaning an iPhone speaker is delicate work. You don’t want to jam something into the mesh or push debris deeper into the phone. Here’s what I personally use:

1. A soft-bristled brush

A clean paintbrushmakeup brush, or camera lens brush is perfect.

2. A wooden toothpick

Wood is safer than metal. It’s firm enough to lift lint, but won’t scratch the mesh if you’re gentle.

3. Compressed air (used correctly)

Short, gentle puffs at a distance — never blasts directly into the speaker.

4. A microfibre cloth

For wiping away loosened dust and oils.

5. Isopropyl alcohol (70%–90%)

Optional — useful for removing oily residue, but use sparingly.

6. Blu Tack (surprisingly effective)

It pulls dust out without pushing anything inside.

7. A wooden coffee stirrer, trimmed and sharpened

Sounds odd, but it gives you a flat scraping edge that’s gentler than a toothpick.

That’s the full “toolbox.” And yes, you can clean everything using just a couple of these.


How NOT to Clean iPhone Speakers (Seriously, Don’t Do These)

Let me save you from expensive repair bills. Never use:

  • Needles, pins, or metal tools
    These pierce the mesh or scrape the waterproof membrane.
  • Vacuum cleaners
    Suction can damage internal seals or pull dust deeper.
  • Wet wipes or cleaning sprays
    Moisture goes straight under the grill.
  • Toothbrushes with stiff bristles
    They can snag and rip the mesh.
  • Drenching the speaker with rubbing alcohol
    A tiny amount is fine, but puddles can seep into the phone.
  • Your mouth to blow dust out
    Moisture from your breath makes things worse.

Apple’s official advice matches this: keep liquids away, no sharp objects, and no aggressive cleaning methods.


Method 1: The Simple Brush Cleaning (Takes 2 Minutes)

This is my favourite method — quick, safe, effective.

Step-by-step:

  1. Turn off your iPhone.
    Not optional. Avoid sending vibrations or power through the speaker while cleaning.
  2. Hold the phone so the speaker faces downward.
    Gravity will help loosened dust fall out, not sink deeper.
  3. Brush gently in short strokes.
    Use a clean, dry, soft brush. Brush across the grill, not into it.
  4. Wipe away what the brush removes.
    Use a microfibre cloth.

Why this works:

Most blockage is lint sitting on top of the mesh, not deep inside. Brushing removes the top layer and often restores full volume instantly.


Method 2: The Toothpick Lift (for Persistent Lint)

Speaker grills get “stuck” lint that forms tiny mats. A wooden toothpick can lift these out safely.

How to do it:

  1. Gently angle the toothpick at 45 degrees.
  2. Skim the surface of the mesh, don’t poke downward.
  3. Lift lint carefully, like scraping crumbs from fabric.
  4. Tap the phone gently with the speaker facing down.

What NOT to do:

Don’t dig. Don’t push. Don’t twist the toothpick inside the hole. The mesh is thin.

Who this method is for:

People who work in dusty environments, keep their iPhone in jeans pockets, or carry it in a bag without a case.


Method 3: Blu Tack (Shockingly Good)

If you’ve never tried this, trust me — it feels like magic.

Instructions:

  1. Roll a fresh blob of Blu Tack until soft and slightly sticky.
  2. Press it gently onto the speaker grill.
  3. Lift it straight off — don’t twist.
  4. Repeat a few times.

Why it works:

Blu Tack grabs fine dust and fibres without pushing anything into the speaker mesh. It’s one of the safest ways to extract debris.

Bonus tip:

Works brilliantly on the top earpiece speaker, where brushes struggle.


Method 4: The Isopropyl Alcohol Polish (for Grease and Gunk)

This method isn’t for brute dust removal — it’s for those times when your speaker looks clean but still sounds blocky. Oil and skin residue can clog mesh holes without being visible.

Steps:

  1. Put a drop of isopropyl alcohol on a microfibre cloth.
  2. Wipe gently across the speaker grill.
  3. Brush again after wiping.

Important:

Never drip liquid into the speaker. Alcohol evaporates, but only if you don’t flood it.


Method 5: Compressed Air (Used Safely)

Yes, you can use compressed air — Apple says no, but real-world experience tells a more nuanced story.

Here’s the safe version:

  • Keep the nozzle 4–6 inches away
  • Use short, gentle bursts
  • Aim across the speaker, not directly into it

If you blast air from 1 cm away, you risk damaging the waterproof membrane. From a distance? It’s fine.

This works best on loose dust, not stubborn lint.


Method 6: The Dry-Brush + Blu Tack Combo (My Personal Go-To)

This method gives you the most thorough clean without risk:

  1. Brush out loose debris.
  2. Use Blu Tack to lift stubborn dust.
  3. Brush again to finish.

It’s meticulous but safe.


Cleaning the Top Earpiece Speaker (The Tricky One)

This speaker is harder to clean because:

  • The mesh is finer
  • The opening is small
  • Dust hides deeper
  • You can’t get tools in easily

Here’s the method that has worked best for me:

1. Use a soft brush first

Brush horizontally, then vertically. Aim to loosen surface dust.

2. Use Blu Tack or sticky putty

This is where Blu Tack shines. Press lightly, lift straight, repeat.

3. Try the toothpick gently along the edges

Not inside the slit — just gently skim the outer frame to catch lint trapped at the corners.

4. Test call volume

Call your voicemail and listen. Compare before vs after.

If you still hear muffling, you probably need the next method.


Method 7: The Speaker Vibration Trick (No Tools Needed)

One of the easiest ways to move dust out is to force the speaker to vibrate.

Here’s what you do:

  1. Go to YouTube
  2. Search for “iPhone speaker cleaning sound”
  3. Play a tone that pulsates or sweeps
  4. Turn the volume up
  5. Hold the phone so the speaker faces downward

The vibrations shake dust loose. This isn’t a myth — it works surprisingly well.

A similar technique is used in ultrasonic cleaners, just much gentler.


Method 8: The Water-Expulsion Method (Yes, But With Caution)

If your iPhone got wet, water can sit behind the speaker grill and cause crackling. Some people use water-expulsion apps.

You can use them too — but only if:

  • Your phone is water-resistant (iPhone 7 or newer)
  • You haven’t cracked your screen
  • You use short bursts of sound, not long sessions

Steps:

  1. Search for “water eject sound iPhone” on YouTube
  2. Play it while holding the phone upright
  3. Wipe away droplets as they emerge

This can help if the issue is moisture, not dust.


Signs Your iPhone Speakers Need Cleaning

Here’s how to know it’s time.

Sound Symptoms

  • Volume drops noticeably
  • Music sounds dull or “underwater”
  • Voices on calls are muffled
  • Crackling at low or high volume
  • Distorted treble tones

Visual Symptoms

  • Lint trapped against the mesh
  • Dark patches where dust has built up
  • Oily residue from fingers
  • Tiny fibres embedded in the grill

Behavioural Symptoms

  • You keep pushing volume to max
  • You switch to speakerphone more often
  • You can hear better when using AirPods
  • People say you’re faint on calls

If you have two or more of these signs: clean the speakers.


How Often Should You Clean Them?

It depends how you use your phone. Here’s what I’ve learned:

Your LifestyleCleaning Frequency
Keep the phone in jeans pocketsEvery 2–3 weeks
Keep it in a bag with debrisEvery month
Work in dusty environmentsEvery 1–2 weeks
Use the phone at the gymEvery 2 weeks
Desk worker with caseEvery 1–2 months
Use a screen protector with dust gapMore often

Personally, I brush mine weekly. It takes 10 seconds and avoids bigger problems.


Does Cleaning Affect Water Resistance?

Some people worry that brushing or using a toothpick will affect water resistance. The truth:

  • Cleaning the outside mesh does not affect waterproofing
  • The waterproof seal sits behind the speaker, not on the grill
  • Damage only happens if you poke hard or use metal tools

You’re safe if you keep things gentle and avoid stabbing motions.


Should You Use a Case or Cover to Protect the Speakers?

Here’s the blunt truth: most cases don’t protect speakers. They protect the body of the phone, not the grills. Some cases actually make things worse by redirecting lint into the speaker holes.

If you want protection:

  • Get a case with precise speaker cutouts
  • Avoid cases with wide open bottom edges
  • Clean the inside of your case regularly

But cleaning is still unavoidable.


When Cleaning Doesn’t Fix It

If cleaning doesn’t restore sound quality, you may have one of these issues:

1. Speaker membrane damage

Caused by drops, ageing, or manufacturing defects.

2. Water penetration

Even water-resistant phones can let moisture in through cracks.

3. Software glitch

Try rebooting or updating iOS.

4. Bluetooth interference

If your phone thinks it’s connected to a device.

5. Hardware failure

Rare, but possible.

6. Dust behind the mesh (internal)

This requires professional repair — you can’t open it safely.


Advanced Tip: Cleaning Without Removing Your Case

If your case has small speaker cutouts, dust may accumulate at the edges. You can clean without removing the case:

  1. Brush along the inside of the cutout
  2. Use Blu Tack pressed along the cutout edge
  3. Use the toothpick to lift lint around the borders
  4. Brush again

This works surprisingly well.


Advanced Tip: Stop Pocket Lint Before It Starts

If you carry your phone in your pocket, you’re basically feeding your speakers a buffet of lint every day.

What has helped me:

  • Keep your phone in the front pocket, not back
  • Avoid pockets with torn lining
  • Keep tissues or paper out of that pocket
  • Use a slim case with raised speaker edges
  • Brush the pocket lining occasionally (sounds weird but works)

A quick habit change can reduce 80% of lint build-up.


Advanced Tip: What To Do If You Spilled Something Sticky on the Speaker

If you spilled coffee, juice, beer, or anything sugary:

  1. Turn the phone off immediately
  2. Don’t wipe across the grill (pushes liquid inside)
  3. Use a microfibre cloth to dab, not wipe
  4. Use isopropyl alcohol on the cloth to break down sugars
  5. Lift residue with Blu Tack
  6. Let it dry for at least 30 minutes

Sticky liquids are the worst thing for speaker clarity. Clean quickly and you’ll avoid permanent muffling.


Step-by-Step: Full Deep Clean Routine

Here’s the full process I use when I want everything spotless.

1. Turn the phone off

2. Brush the bottom speakers

Use short, horizontal strokes.

3. Brush the top earpiece

Use vertical and horizontal patterns.

4. Use Blu Tack on all speaker areas

Press gently and lift repeatedly.

5. Use a toothpick for any visible lint

Lift gently at an angle.

6. Wipe with a microfibre cloth and alcohol

Only lightly dampen one corner.

7. Play a speaker-cleaning sound

Vibrate out leftover debris.

8. Do a test call and play music

Check clarity and volume.

This whole process takes less than five minutes but works wonders.


Fixing the “Muffled Call Audio” Problem

If people say you sound quiet on calls, the top earpiece is probably the culprit.

Here’s the specific fix:

  1. Brush the earpiece horizontally
  2. Use Blu Tack specifically on the centre part
  3. Brush vertically
  4. Play a high-frequency sound through the earpiece
  5. Call your voicemail and compare the sound

This method has solved call-audio issues for me every time except when the phone was actually damaged.


Fixing the “Muffled Music” Problem

If Spotify, YouTube, or Apple Music sound dull:

  • It’s usually the bottom speakers
  • The problem is almost always dust
  • Blu Tack + brushing usually fixes it instantly

If not, check Settings → Accessibility → Audio/Visual → Balance to ensure the audio balance slider hasn’t shifted.


Real-World Cleaning Scenarios (Based on My Experience)

Here are a few memorable examples.

1. The “Gym iPhone” Problem

Sweat and humidity cause grime buildup. A deep clean restored clarity in one minute.

2. The “Jeans Pocket Blockage”

Lint forms compressed “mats” over the grill. The toothpick technique lifts it out perfectly.

3. The “Toddler Drool Incident”

Blu Tack saved the day by lifting dried saliva residue from the mesh.

4. The “Accidental Beer Spill”

Alcohol wipe + Blu Tack lifted sticky residue before it hardened.


Why Your iPhone Sounds Quiet After Cleaning

Sometimes cleaning makes the sound appear temporarily quieter. That’s because:

  • You removed debris that was causing the speaker to “vibrate louder”
  • Your brain got used to the distorted sound
  • Clean sound can initially seem softer

Give it a minute — your ears will adjust.


If You Absolutely Must: When to See Apple Support

Seek professional help when:

  • Sound is still muffled after a full clean
  • Speakers crackle even at low volume
  • The phone got submerged deeply in water
  • The phone was dropped hard
  • Calls sound distorted even with headphones
  • Audio output disappears entirely

Apple can clean, test, or replace the speakers. But do all the above first — most problems are simple dirt.


Final Thoughts: Clean Often, Clean Gently, and Your iPhone Will Sound Better Than New

Cleaning your iPhone speakers isn’t rocket science. It’s a mix of common sensegentle handling, and knowing what tools to use. Every time I clean mine, the sound becomes clearer, louder, and sharper — and it always amazes me how such a tiny task has such a big impact.

Do it regularly, keep lint under control, and treat your speaker grills with care. You’ll extend your iPhone’s life and enjoy far better sound without paying for repairs.

If you follow the steps in this article, you’ll know exactly how to clean iPhone speakers safely, effectively, and without risking damage.

author avatar
Simon CEO/CTO, Author and Blogger
Simon is a creative and passionate business leader dedicated to having fun in the pursuit of high performance and personal development. He is co-founder of Truthsayers Neurotech, the world's first Neurotech platform servicing the enterprise. Simon graduated from the University of Liverpool Business School with a MBA, and the University of Teesside with BSc Computer Science. Simon is an Associate Member of the Chartered Institute of Professional Development and Associate Member of the Agile Business Consortium. He ia also the President of his regional BNI group.

Leave a Comment

Note: Please do not use this comment form if you are making an inquiry into advertising/collaboration. Use this form instead.

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

 

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Scroll to Top