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Getting used to behind-the-ear hearing aids with earmoulds

Getting used to behind-the-ear hearing aids with earmoulds

Find out what to expect from your hearing aids, how to get used to them and how to take care of them. 

A behind-the-ear hearing aid sends amplified sound into your ear through a thin tube connected to either an earmould or a small, soft earpiece that sits inside your ear canal.

This a guide to getting used to hearing aids with earmoulds.

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What to expect from your hearing aids

Modern hearing aids are digital, sophisticated and produce good quality sound. Your audiologist will fine-tune your hearing aids to your prescription, which is based on your hearing test results. Your hearing aid settings are unique to you. 

Your hearing aids might not help you hear perfectly in all situations, but they should help you hear: 

  • speech more clearly 
  • the TV at a lower volume  
  • everyday alerting sounds such as the doorbell and telephone ringing 
  • quieter sounds that you would struggle to hear without hearing aids.  

They will also adjust to different environments, so that sounds are not uncomfortably loud.

Most hearing aids have the option for you to control the volume, which may be helpful in different situations. The controls vary for different hearing aid models, so speak to your audiologist if you’re not sure how to change the volume level.

Your audiologist may set up additional programs on your hearing aids to suit your hearing needs in different situations. For example, some hearing aids have a program that helps you pick up sounds in front of you, rather than at the side or behind. This can help you focus on what you want to listen to in noisy places. If you’re not sure about the different programs your hearing aids have, or how they could help, speak to your audiologist.  

Hearing aids cannot cut out background noise completely, so you might still struggle to hear one voice in a noisy place. In these situations, assistive listening devices, learning to lipread and following communication tips might really help.

Find out more about assistive technology for people with hearing loss

Find out more about lipreading and communication tips

How to get used to the sounds you hear

At first, what you hear might sound different or odd. You might find that everything sounds louder than you expect and your own voice might sound strange. This is because you might not have heard these sounds at their correct levels for a long time, and it will take a little while for your brain to learn that this sound level is normal.

Our step-by-step guide to getting used to hearing aids:

  1. Slowly build up the time you spend using your hearing aids – start by using them once or twice a day for an hour or two in quiet surroundings.
  2. Listen to everyday noises around the house – like the kettle boiling. Your brain might need time to relearn the significance of these sounds and to ignore the unimportant ones.
  3. Use your hearing aids while watching TV – this will help you get used to hearing different sounds.
  4. Try conversations with one person – make sure you’re in a quiet room and the other person sits facing you in good light so it’s easier to lipread them.
  5. Try group conversations – don’t expect to hear everything that’s said when you’re with more than one person, but try to follow the conversation.
  6. Practise using your hearing aids outside – it’s normal for some sounds to seem very loud until you get used to them.
  7. Try using your hearing aids in noisy places – these are likely to be the most difficult listening situations. 

It can take a month or longer to adjust to hearing aids and get the most out of them, even when using them regularly in different situations. The important thing is not to give up.

If you have any difficulties, tell your audiologist so they can help.

For help with making the most of your hearing aids, read the Which? guide to hearing aids features.

How to fit your hearing aids correctly

It’s important to make sure you put in your hearing aids correctly:

  1. Hold your hearing aid near your ear and place the part of the earmould that goes down the ear canal into position.
  2. Use your other hand to pull down your earlobe and push the earmould firmly into the bowl of your ear.
  3. Place the main part of the hearing aid behind your ear.

Make sure the top part of the earmould is tucked into the top of the bowl of your ear. If the hearing aid isn’t fitted correctly, it may whistle or your ear may become sore.

If you have two hearing aids, your audiologist should have marked which one is for which ear. The marker is always red for the right ear and blue for the left. Think ‘R’ for red and ‘R’ for right.

Watch a video on how to fit your hearing aids correctly on the C2Hear website

How to clean your hearing aids

You need to clean and service your hearing aids regularly to keep them working well. They can easily become blocked with ear wax, moisture and other dirt, which can reduce the quality of the sound you hear. 

Every night:

  1. Clean the hearing aid, including the earmould, by wiping it carefully with a soft, dry cloth or tissue, or a wetwipe that does not contain alcohol or chemicals. Take care not to get the hearing aid wet.
  2. Use a wax pick (a tool for cleaning hearing aids) to remove any wax or debris that has got into the channel that goes through the earmould.

About once a week, wash the earmould:

  1. Gently pull the soft tubing off the hooked part of the hearing aid. Don’t pull the tubing out of the earmould as you won’t get it back in again.
  2. Wash the earmould (with its tubing still in place) in warm, soapy water. Use a nailbrush or a vent cleaner (or both) to remove any wax. Rinse it well, blow down the tubing to get the water out.
  3. Leave the earmould to dry overnight. Then push the tubing back onto the hearing aid.

Hearing aid cleaning tools

Some audiology providers supply or sell hearing aid cleaning tools for a small fee, so ask your audiologist what is available. You can use a:

  • soft brush to remove wax from the earmould – sometimes these also have a magnetic battery removal tool
  • wax pick or wire loop, to remove wax from small nooks
  • dry cloth to wipe the hearing aid
  • puffer, which blows air through the hearing aid tubing, to remove blockages
  • multitool, which has a wire loop, magnet and brush.

You can also buy these products online from Connevans in partnership with RNID. Visit the online shop

How to use the loop (T) setting

Most hearing aids have a hearing loop setting (formerly called the ‘T’ setting).

When you switch your hearing aids to the loop setting, you’ll be able to:

  • pick up sound from hearing loop systems (loops)
  • use assistive listening devices with your hearing aids to help you hear better over background noise.

A hearing loop helps you hear more clearly over background noise because it sends sound from a source – for example, a microphone –
directly to your hearing aids.

Loops are often found in public places such as theatres, cinemas, shops and banks.

You can also get loop systems for your home. Telephones
described as ‘hearing aid compatible’ have a type of built-in loop that
can give you a clearer phone conversation with less background noise.

If you don’t have this setting and would like it, speak to your audiologist.

Find out more about assistive technology to help with hearing loss

How to change your hearing aid batteries

If you use your hearing aids for most of the day, every day, you’ll need to change your hearing aid batteries about once a week. Many hearing aids will give warning beeps when the battery needs changing.  

  1. Open the drawer wide but try not to force it. 
  2. Look at the way the battery sits in the drawer before you remove it.
  3. Take a replacement battery from its packet. It will have a sticky label indicating the positive (+) side of the battery. 
  4. The flat positive side of the battery (+) sits face up in the drawer. Make sure it’s the right way up otherwise it won’t work. 

Your audiologist can show you how to change the battery if you haven’t already been shown or need a reminder. 

Remember to switch your hearing aids off when you take them out, to save the batteries and to prevent whistling noises. And don’t forget to carry spare batteries when you go out. 

Where to get hearing aid batteries and replacement tubing

If you have NHS hearing aids  

You can get free batteries and replacement tubing from:  

  • your NHS audiology service or ear, nose and throat department – in person or by post  
  • a local health centre that supplies batteries  
  • an RNID local hearing aid support service – check if one runs in your area. 

You’ll need to take your hearing aid repair book or battery card with you. Ask your audiologist about local arrangements.

If you bought your hearing aids privately  

Batteries and new tubing may be included in your payment plan. If not, you’ll need to buy them from a pharmacy or your hearing aid provider.

You can also get hearing aid batteries from supermarkets and online.



Contact us

If you are deaf, have hearing loss or tinnitus and need free confidential and impartial information and support, contact RNID.

We’re open 8:30am to 5pm, Monday to Friday.


Get more information by email

At RNID, we offer free information and support to the 12 million people living with hearing loss in the UK.

Sign up for a series of emails from our Information Team to find out more about getting hearing aids, including:

  • the types of hearing aids available  
  • communication tips while you wait for them
  • and how you can look after them. 

Page last updated: 11 January 2022

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