Soundproofing ceilings is more complicated than soundproofing walls for two main reasons. Firstly, when noise penetrates through a ceiling, it is often characterised as impact noise.
Impact noise, such as footsteps or dropped objects, travels through the building’s structure and “creeps” along walls, floors, and beams, causing sound leaks through adjacent partitions. As already mentioned above, research clearly indicates that impact noise is particularly challenging to control because its vibrations are transmitted along continuous structural paths.
Secondly, most rooms lack the sufficient headroom required to install a thick, effective sound insulation layer. In many residential spaces, adding bulky insulation to the ceiling would significantly reduce the ceiling height, compromising the room's aesthetics, functionality, and the overall feeling one can have in this room.
Our experience shows that optimal ceiling soundproofing is achieved when the system avoids rigid connections—ensuring that all vibration and sound transmission paths are well interrupted—and is sometimes combined with insulation on parallel walls to mitigate residual noise leakage.