FCC Mandates Hearing Aid Compatibility for All Mobile Handsets

FCC Mandates Hearing Aid Compatibility for All Mobile Handsets

Summary: The FCC has adopted new rules requiring all mobile phones to be compatible with hearing aids, expanding access to mobile technology for Americans with hearing loss.

Takeaways:

  1. The new FCC rules ensure that Americans with hearing loss can choose from the full range of mobile handsets available, without being limited by compatibility concerns.
  2. A new Bluetooth coupling requirement encourages universal connectivity between hearing aids and mobile devices, improving user experience across all handset models.
  3. The rules also set volume control standards and introduce clear labeling to help consumers make informed choices when purchasing hearing aid-compatible mobile phones.

The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) adopted new rules establishing that all mobile handsets—such as smartphones—must be compatible with hearing aids.  With this change, the 48 million Americans with hearing loss will be able to choose among the same mobile phone models that are available to all consumers.  

New Rule Expands Access to Technology

Under the new rules, after a transition period, Americans with hearing loss will no longer be limited in their choice of technologies, features, and prices available in the mobile handset marketplace, according to the FCC.

The Commission also established a Bluetooth coupling requirement that will benefit consumers by ensuring more universal connectivity between mobile handsets and hearing aids, including over-the-counter hearing aids, by encouraging handset manufacturers to move away from proprietary Bluetooth coupling standards.

Further reading: Making All Phones Hearing Aid Compatible

Meeting Volume Control Benchmarks

The Report and Order also requires that all new mobile handsets available in the U.S. must meet volume control benchmarks that ensure clear audio for the listener by allowing them to increase a mobile handset’s audio volume without introducing distortion.  Such requirements accommodate consumers with hearing loss who do not use hearing aids as well as those that rely on hearing aids or cochlear implants.

The new rules also revise labeling and website posting requirements to ensure consumers have access to the information that they need to make informed handset purchasing decisions. Point-of-sale labeling requirements will clarify if the handset is certified as hearing aid compatible, whether or not the handset meets telecoil or Bluetooth coupling requirements, and provide the handset’s conversational gain (i.e., how high the handset’s audio volume can be raised while still meeting volume control requirements).

Establishing Hearing Aid Compatibility

Establishing a 100% hearing aid compatibility requirement for all mobile handsets was made possible by the collaborative efforts of members of the Hearing Aid Compatibility Task Force—an independent organization of wireless service providers, handset manufacturers, research institutions and advocates for those with hearing loss.  Members of the Task Force worked together over a period of years to reach a consensus on how the Commission could achieve its objective of requiring 100% of all mobile handsets to be hearing aid compatible, the FCC says.

Action by the Commission Oct. 17, 2024 by Report and Order (FCC 24-112).  Chairwoman Rosenworcel, Commissioners Carr, Starks, Simington, and Gomez approving.  Chairwoman Rosenworcel and Commissioner Starks issuing separate statements.

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