Home > Health > Former Audiologist Reviews Every UK Hearing Aid Option - From Free NHS to £3,000 Clinics - and Reveals What She'd Actually Recommend
Former Audiologist Reviews Every UK Hearing Aid Option - From Free NHS to £3,000 Clinics - and Reveals What She'd Actually Recommend
Published by Healthy Living Digest | Health | 👁 12256 📖 4 min
Stop paying thousands for overpriced hearing aids that are bulky and uncomfortable
NHS Hearing Aids
They're free. The technology is decent, the NHS buys from the same manufacturers as the private clinics. But you'll wait 6 to 18 months to get them. When you do, you'll most likely get behind-the-ear aids. The big beige ones with a tube that hooks over your ear. They work. But the batteries die every four days. They whistle every time you pick up the phone. There's one volume setting for everything. And everyone can see them. I fitted these for years. I know how many end up in a drawer.
About 2 in 5 people stop wearing them. Not because they're broken. Because living with them is exhausting.
Specsavers, Boots, and the private clinics
verage price at Specsavers: £2,143. Boots: £2,914. Hidden Hearing: £3,720.
The technology is good. I'm not going to pretend it isn't.
But after 30 years in this industry, I can tell you exactly what you're paying for. The hearing aid itself, the receiver, the chip, the microphone, costs about £80 to £100 to manufacture. I've seen the invoices. I know what the NHS pays per unit.
The rest of that £3,000? The shop on the high street. The sales staff. The audiologist's commission, and yes, most high street audiologists earn a percentage of what they sell you. That's why they always recommend the premium range. The area manager. The head office. The television adverts.
And nobody tells you about the ongoing costs. Batteries: £27 a year. Replacement parts when something wears out: £40 to £70. When something breaks, one customer told me Boots charged £99 just to assess the problem. Repair on top: £350 to £500.
Over ten years, you're looking at closer to £6,000. For technology that costs £100 to make.
I spent my whole career watching pensioners choose between their heating and their hearing. It made me sick.
Amazon
This is where I get genuinely angry.
What Amazon sells are not hearing aids. They're amplifiers. I need people to understand this because it's the single biggest reason people think cheap hearing aids don't work.
An amplifier makes everything louder. Voices, traffic, the fridge, your own breathing, all at the same volume. It cannot separate speech from background noise. That's why voices stay muffled while everything else gets painfully loud.
A real hearing aid has a digital processing chip that filters sound. It makes voices clearer and pushes background noise down. Completely different technology.
That processing chip for hearing aids costs around £80 on its own. If you're buying a complete device for £39 on Amazon, that chip is not in there. What you're getting is a speaker and a battery in a plastic shell.
In my testing, Amazon amplifiers were the worst option by far. Potentially dangerous. Risk of further hearing damage from unfiltered loud noise.
If you've tried Amazon and given up, you weren't trying hearing aids. You were trying amplifiers. Please don't let that experience put you off.
Direct-to-Consumer: Smart Hearing (£149)