There's an echo on your Zoom calls and everyone can hear themselves
An echo in Zoom almost always means your speaker and microphone are too close together or your microphone is picking up sound from your speakers. The quickest fix is to turn on Zoom's echo cancellation setting and mute yourself when you're not talking. If you're using external speakers, try moving your microphone away from them or switching to a headset.
When your microphone picks up sound from your speakers, Zoom sends that sound back to the other people in the call — they hear their own words echoing back. This happens when your speaker and microphone are too close together or your microphone is very sensitive. Turning on Zoom's automatic echo cancellation fixes it in most cases, and muting yourself when you're not talking stops it happening at all.
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Skip — I just want a technicianCommon mistakes to avoid
- Turning off your microphone instead of muting in Zoom — in Zoom, mute (the button in the app) is different from disabling audio in Windows settings
- Not realizing that the echo is coming from your own speaker — people can hear their own voice, not someone else's
- Assuming it's a Zoom problem when it's actually a speaker placement issue
Signs you need professional help
- You've turned on echo cancellation, moved your microphone, and switched to a headset, but the echo is still there
- Only your microphone creates echo, no one else's does
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