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Mind Body Life

Types of Hearing Loss: Conductive, Sensorineural & Mixed

By Mind Body Life · March 19, 2026 · 9 min read · Hearing Loss

Hearing loss is not a single condition — it's a symptom with multiple possible causes and types, each originating in a different part of the hearing system. Understanding which type you have matters enormously, because the treatment options, prognosis, and day-to-day management differ significantly between them.

Conductive Hearing Loss

✓ Often Reversible

Conductive hearing loss occurs when sound cannot efficiently travel through the outer or middle ear — from the pinna through the ear canal to the eardrum and ossicles. The inner ear (cochlea) and auditory nerve are working normally, but the sound signal isn't reaching them properly.

Common Causes

Typical Symptoms

Treatment Options

Many causes of conductive hearing loss are medically or surgically treatable. Earwax removal, antibiotics for infections, grommets for persistent fluid, and surgery for structural issues can often restore hearing. Even when full restoration isn't possible, hearing aids and OTC devices are highly effective because the inner ear is undamaged.

Sensorineural Hearing Loss

⚠️ Usually Permanent

Sensorineural hearing loss (SNHL) occurs when the delicate hair cells of the cochlea (inner ear) or the auditory nerve itself are damaged. Sound enters the ear normally, but the signal is not processed correctly by the sensory organ or transmitted properly to the brain.

Common Causes

Typical Symptoms

Treatment Options

Sensorineural hearing loss cannot be reversed — hair cells in the cochlea do not regenerate. However, it's managed effectively with hearing aids (including OTC hearing aids for mild-to-moderate loss), cochlear implants (for severe-to-profound loss), and assistive listening devices. Early intervention is always better.

OTC Hearing Aids and Sensorineural Loss

The FDA's OTC hearing aid category is specifically designed for adults with mild-to-moderate sensorineural hearing loss. Most people with age-related or noise-induced hearing loss fall into this category and can benefit from OTC devices like MDHearing NEO XS or MDHearing VOLT 4.

Mixed Hearing Loss

Mixed hearing loss is exactly what it sounds like: a combination of conductive and sensorineural components. You have underlying sensorineural loss (from aging or noise exposure, for example) combined with a superimposed conductive problem (such as earwax buildup or an infection).

The conductive component may be medically treatable. The sensorineural component is permanent. Hearing aids — including OTC hearing aids — can address both components simultaneously.

Degrees of Hearing Loss

Type tells you where the problem is; degree tells you how much hearing you've lost. Hearing loss is measured in decibels (dB HL) across the speech frequency range (0.25–8 kHz).

DegreedB RangeAbility to Hear SpeechOTC Suitable?
Normal−10 to 25 dBNo difficultyNo
Mild26–40 dBSoft speech difficult✓ Yes
Moderate41–60 dBNormal speech difficult✓ Yes
Severe61–80 dBLoud speech needed⚠️ Prescription recommended
Profound81+ dBMay rely on sign language✗ No (cochlear implant)

How Each Type Is Diagnosed

A proper hearing test (audiometry) performed by an audiologist can distinguish between conductive and sensorineural loss. The key test is bone conduction: a vibrating device is placed on the bone behind your ear, bypassing the outer and middle ear and sending sound directly to the cochlea.

→ See our full guide to hearing testing

⚠️ Medical Disclaimer

This article is for educational purposes only. If you believe you have hearing loss, consult a qualified audiologist or healthcare provider for a proper assessment. Read full disclaimer