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August 18, 2025

Noise Monitoring Basics for Commercial Property Owners

By Corey Myers

By Diane Cuyle, CIH, and Corey Myers, CIH

As urban growth accelerates and mixed-use developments become more common, managing noise impacts has become an important responsibility for property owners and managers. Whether it’s responding to tenant complaints, meeting permit requirements, or ensuring compliance with local ordinances, the stakes for accurate noise monitoring are high. Partnering with a qualified Environmental Health and Safety (EHS) professional can make the difference between a smooth process and costly setbacks.

 Why Noise Monitoring Matters

 Community noise isn’t just a nuisance — it can have direct implications for occupant satisfaction, neighborhood relations, and even legal compliance. Many cities and municipalities enforce strict noise ordinances that set permissible limits, often varying by time of day and location. Failing to comply can lead to fines, disputes, and reputational damage.

 Noise monitoring is particularly important for:

  • Urban properties where construction, nightlife, and traffic create constant sound sources. 
  • Industrial or commercial sites near residential areas or sensitive receptors such as schools or hospitals. 
  • Residential communities where persistent or nighttime noise can spark tenant turnover or formal complaints.

By proactively monitoring and documenting noise levels, property owners and managers can protect their investments and demonstrate good stewardship to the surrounding community.

The Value of a Qualified EHS Professional

An experienced EHS professional brings more than just technical knowledge; they offer a structured, defensible approach to evaluating and managing noise. They can:

  • Navigate complex local regulations to ensure monitoring aligns with the correct ordinance version.
  • Tailor assessments to the specific property type, surrounding environment, and stakeholder concerns.
  • Deliver clear, actionable reports that provide both raw data and interpreted findings relevant to ordinance compliance.
  • Support positive community relations by providing factual, unbiased evidence to address complaints.

This professional expertise helps property owners avoid missteps, such as using outdated ordinance criteria or choosing inappropriate monitoring locations, which can result in invalid data or repeated site visits.

What to Expect from a Qualified Technician

When you hire an EHS professional for noise monitoring, you can expect:

  1. Pre-Assessment Planning – A review of local noise ordinances, permit requirements, and site-specific conditions to define the scope of work.
  2. Strategic Monitoring Approach – Selection of representative locations and timeframes that reflect actual noise exposure patterns.
  3. Professional-Grade Equipment – Use of calibrated monitoring devices suited for both short-term and long-term measurements, with safeguards against tampering or data loss.
  4. Thorough Documentation – Inclusion of charts, graphs, and clear explanations to help you understand how measured levels compare to legal limits.
  5. Defensible Reporting – Reports designed to stand up to regulatory review or legal scrutiny, ensuring transparency and credibility.

The Bottom Line 

Noise monitoring is more than just measuring sound; it’s about protecting property value, maintaining community goodwill, and ensuring regulatory compliance. By enlisting a qualified EHS professional, property owners and managers gain peace of mind knowing that the process is handled with accuracy, professionalism, and an understanding of both the science and the human side of noise issues. 

Being proactive in noise monitoring isn’t just good practice. It’s good business. 

About the Authors

Corey Myers

Corey Myers

Technical Director
Corey Myers is an experienced Technical Director and Contract Manager performing industrial hygiene studies; occupational exposure assessments; radon measurement; asbestos, mold, and lead evaluations; soil, groundwater, surface water, and air sampling. She also performs petroleum storage tank compliance inspections and community noise studies. She directs the day-to-day operations, business development, financial planning, and strategic planning for a team of industrial hygienists working throughout Florida.

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