Comparing Sound Ratings for Wall Panel Products

Because In Shared Spaces, What You Don’t Hear Matters Most

In today’s commercial interiors—offices, healthcare facilities, schools, hotels—acoustic comfort isn’t optional. It’s a requirement. Conversations in one room shouldn’t bleed into the next. Paging systems shouldn’t echo down corridors. Privacy, focus, and noise control all start with the right wall assemblies. That’s where understanding sound ratings for wall panel products becomes essential.

Not all wall panels are created equal. Beyond aesthetic and fire performance, panels vary significantly in their ability to reduce sound transmission or absorb ambient noise. For architects, contractors, and distributors, helping customers choose wall panels based on their acoustic performance—measured in STC, NRC, and CAC ratings—is a competitive advantage.

The Three Key Sound Ratings You Need to Know

STC (Sound Transmission Class)

Measures how well a panel or wall assembly blocks airborne sound (like voices or music) from passing through. Higher STC = better sound blocking.

Typical target: 35–55 for commercial interiors

Use STC-rated panels in offices, conference rooms, and patient spaces

NRC (Noise Reduction Coefficient)

Measures how much sound a surface absorbs instead of reflecting it. Higher NRC = better absorption (less echo and reverberation).

Typical NRC range: 0.50 to 1.00

Use high-NRC panels in lobbies, classrooms, and open-plan offices

CAC (Ceiling Attenuation Class)

Measures how much sound travels through ceiling panels into adjacent spaces. Critical in rooms with shared plenum above.

Useful when: Wall panels terminate below deck but privacy is still required

Not a wall panel rating, but related in spaces with indirect sound paths

Keywords: acoustic wall panel ratings, STC vs NRC, soundproofing commercial walls

Types of Wall Panels and Their Acoustic Roles

1. Laminated Panels with Mass Core (High STC)

Engineered with dense cores like MDF or gypsum, these panels block sound transmission effectively when installed with acoustic seals and resilient mounts.

Best for: Shared office walls, private exam rooms, multifamily demising walls

STC-rated assemblies can reach 50+ with proper installation

2. Fabric-Wrapped Acoustic Panels (High NRC)

Soft-surfaced panels designed to absorb ambient sound. Mounted to walls or ceilings in reverberant spaces.

Use in: Cafeterias, libraries, atriums

NRC values often range from 0.75 to 1.00 depending on thickness and core material

3. Perforated Wood or MDF Panels

Designed to provide a balance of aesthetics and acoustics, these panels allow sound to pass through into an absorbent backing.

Great for: Performing arts centers, lecture halls, high-design lobbies

Performance depends on hole pattern, open area, and backing insulation

4. Demountable Modular Panels with Acoustic Ratings

Often used in office fit-outs, these combine hard surfaces with sound-dampening cores, offering a balance of reusability and performance.

STC ratings vary, but many systems target 40–45 for privacy between rooms

What to Consider When Comparing Ratings

Are you blocking sound or absorbing it? (STC vs. NRC)

Is the wall full height, or open to ceiling? (consider CAC)

Are there doors or glass in the wall system?—these reduce overall STC

Do you need fire and acoustic performance together?—look for dual-certified products

How will panels be mounted?—acoustic isolation can be lost if installed rigidly

Best Use Cases by Rating Type

High STC panels: Patient rooms, offices, conference spaces, dorms

High NRC panels: Call centers, classrooms, open-plan offices, event spaces

Balanced STC/NRC panels: Hotel rooms, education corridors, law offices

Perforated aesthetic panels: Cultural venues, corporate boardrooms, public buildings

What Distributors Like Buldix Should Stock

STC-rated wall panel systems with install guides and lab-tested data

Fabric-wrapped NRC panels in standard and custom sizes

Perforated wood and MDF panels with acoustic backers

Combination panels that offer STC + NRC for dual performance

Acoustic sealants, resilient clips, and mounting hardware

Also provide rating comparison charts, acoustic simulation data, and spec sheets for architects and consultants evaluating acoustic performance.

Conclusion: If It Sounds Right, It Feels Right

Sound control is no longer a luxury—it’s a baseline expectation in commercial construction. Choosing the right wall panels means balancing function, finish, and code. Whether you’re designing for speech privacy, noise control, or reverberation reduction, knowing your STC from your NRC is essential.

Distributors who bring acoustic expertise to the table—alongside the right product mix—become more than suppliers. They become essential to the comfort and performance of the space.

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