NRC 1.0 Explained
NRC 1.0 Explained: What It Means and What It Does Not
NRC stands for Noise Reduction Coefficient. It is a single-number rating per ASTM C423 representing average sound absorption across the four standard test bands (250, 500, 1000, and 2000 Hz), rounded to the nearest 0.05. NRC 1.0 means very high broadband absorption in those bands.
What NRC 1.0 actually means
- Lab-tested average across 250, 500, 1000, and 2000 Hz
- Reported per ASTM C423 standard
- Rounded to the nearest 0.05
- NRC 1.0 = the highest value reported on the standard 0.0 to 1.0 scale
- Indicates very high broadband absorption - the panel pulls energy out of the test bands at near-maximum efficiency
What NRC 1.0 does NOT mean
- It does not mean the panel absorbs 100% of all sound at all frequencies. NRC only averages four mid-range bands.
- It does not include low-frequency performance below 250 Hz. Bass control requires 4-inch panels or dedicated bass traps.
- It does not include high-frequency performance above 2000 Hz, though most panels perform well there too.
- It is not a measure of soundproofing. NRC measures absorption (energy taken out of a room); it is not STC (energy blocked between rooms).
NRC at different panel thicknesses
| Panel thickness | Typical NRC | Best for |
|---|---|---|
| 1 inch | 0.65 to 0.75 | High-frequency control in moderately reverberant rooms |
| 2 inch | Up to 1.0 | Standard mid-and-high-frequency absorption in most rooms |
| 4 inch | Up to 1.05 SAA | Wider broadband, including more low-mid energy |
| 4-inch corner-mounted bass traps | 1.0+ extending below 125 Hz | Low-frequency room-mode control |
NRC vs SAA
Sound Absorption Average (SAA) is a newer, more granular rating per ASTM C423. SAA averages 12 one-third-octave bands instead of NRC's four octave bands. SAA reads slightly higher than NRC on the same product because it captures more frequencies. Both are valid; NRC remains the dominant single-number metric in commercial spec packages.
How NRC affects your room
Reverberation time scales with how much absorption is in a room versus how reflective its surfaces are. A typical conference room with hard floors, hard ceilings, and gypsum walls has reverberation around 1.0 to 1.5 seconds. Adding NRC 1.0 panels covering 10% of total surface area typically drops reverberation to 0.4 to 0.6 seconds, which puts speech intelligibility into a comfortable range.
Frequently asked questions
Does NRC 1.0 mean my room becomes anechoic?
What is the difference between NRC and STC?
Can a panel really reach NRC 1.0?
Why does NRC only cover 250 to 2000 Hz?
Does fabric color affect NRC?
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