Noise-Reducing Fabric Curtains for Commercial Interiors
Acoustic comfort is a specification requirement, not an afterthought. In hotels, offices, restaurants, and conference spaces, uncontrolled noise affects guest satisfaction, productivity, and how a space is actually used. Noise-reducing fabric curtains for commercial interiors offer a practical way to manage echo, ambient noise, and reverberation, without the cost or disruption of structural acoustic treatments.
This guide explains how commercial acoustic curtains work, where they fit in project specification, and what to evaluate before selecting them for your next hospitality or commercial project.
What noise-reducing fabric curtains actually do
The most important distinction to understand early: fabric curtains absorb sound, they do not block it.
A concrete wall or engineered barrier blocks sound transmission between rooms. That performance is measured by STC (Sound Transmission Class). Fabric curtains do not compete on STC. What they do, and do well, is absorb sound energy within a space, reducing echo, reverberation, and the buildup of ambient noise. In industry terms, these are sound-absorbing curtains — commercial applications rely on them for acoustic comfort, not sound isolation.
This is measured by NRC (Noise Reduction Coefficient), a scale from 0.0 to 1.0. An NRC of 0.55 means the fabric absorbs roughly 55% of the sound energy that hits it. The remaining 45% reflects back into the room.
For commercial interiors, that difference matters. A hotel lobby with hard floors, glass walls, and minimal soft furnishing reflects nearly all sound energy. Conversations overlap. Background noise compounds. Fabric curtains with a meaningful NRC rating change that dynamic, not by eliminating noise, but by reducing how much sound bounces between surfaces.
TheHues' soundproof curtains are built around this principle: layered construction that absorbs more sound energy than a single-layer fabric panel.

Where commercial acoustic curtains fit
Acoustic curtains are not a universal solution. They work best in specific commercial environments where reverberation, ambient noise, or speech clarity is a documented problem.
Hotel lobbies and public areas
Large open lobbies with hard flooring, high ceilings, and glass facades create significant echo. Acoustic curtains at window lines or as space-defining elements reduce reflected noise and improve conversational comfort for guests and staff.
Restaurants and dining spaces
Dining environments with exposed ceilings, concrete floors, or open kitchens generate noise that compounds with occupancy. Acoustic fabric curtains, particularly at windows, between sections, or as ceiling-to-floor dividers, absorb enough reflected energy to keep noise levels manageable as the room fills.
Conference rooms and coworking spaces
Speech clarity is the primary acoustic need in meeting environments. Fabric curtains with NRC values above 0.50 reduce echo enough to improve speech intelligibility, especially in rooms with glass partitions or minimal upholstered surfaces.
Theater and performance venues
Stage curtains and side drapes have always served an acoustic function. In commercial theater, event, and auditorium projects, acoustic curtains control sound reflections and help define the acoustic profile of the performance space. Fire-retardant compliance is typically required in these applications.
Office open-plan environments
Open offices generate ambient noise from overlapping conversations, equipment, and foot traffic. Acoustic curtains for offices, used as partition elements or window treatments, reduce the overall noise floor without requiring structural changes.
Hotel corridors and shared spaces
Corridor noise is a recurring guest complaint in hospitality projects. Noise control curtains in hospitality settings — at corridor endpoints, elevator lobbies, or transition zones between public and guest-room areas — absorb enough ambient sound to reduce carryover noise.

How acoustic performance is measured
NRC ratings
NRC is the standard metric for evaluating how well a material absorbs sound. For commercial curtain fabrics, typical NRC values range from 0.40 to 0.65, depending on fabric weight, density, and construction. Premium engineered acoustic panels may reach NRC 0.80 or higher, but these are usually rigid panels rather than fabric curtains.
When comparing NRC values across suppliers, confirm the test conditions. NRC is typically measured with the fabric hung flat. When the same curtain is hung with 50% fullness (pleated), absorption improves because the pleated surface presents more fabric area to the sound field.
Fabric weight and density
Heavier, denser fabrics absorb more sound energy. A 14oz velour fabric may achieve NRC 0.55 flat-hung, while a 21oz velour reaches NRC 0.60 under the same conditions — often categorized as sound deadening curtains in product listings. Weight alone does not tell the full story. Fabric construction, layering, and surface texture all contribute.
TheHues' approach to acoustic performance uses a multi-layer construction rather than relying on a single heavy fabric. This allows the curtain to address noise absorption while also delivering blackout performance and thermal benefits within the same panel.
Fullness and installation
How a curtain is hung affects its acoustic performance as much as the fabric itself.
- Flat hang: Fabric is stretched with minimal gathering. Lowest absorption, but cleanest visual line.
- 1.5x fullness: Fabric is gathered to 1.5x the track width. Measurably higher absorption due to increased surface area and air gaps between folds.
- 2x fullness: Fabric is gathered to 2x the track width. Highest absorption, but uses more material and changes the visual proportion.
For commercial projects, 1.5x fullness is the most common specification because it balances acoustic improvement with material cost and visual intent. Designers should confirm the acoustic impact of the chosen fullness level during the specification review rather than assuming flat-hang NRC values apply to pleated installations.

Specifying acoustics alongside blackout and fire retardancy
Commercial projects rarely need acoustic curtains in isolation. A hotel guest room may need blackout, noise reduction, and fire retardancy from the same window treatment. A conference room may require acoustic absorption and light control. A theater may require all three plus specific mounting and track requirements.
This is where specification becomes a project conversation rather than a product selection exercise.
Blackout and acoustic performance together
Some curtain constructions combine blackout lining with acoustic-grade fabric weight and layering. TheHues' blackout curtains offer light-blocking performance that can be paired with acoustic construction in the same panel, reducing the need for separate curtain layers.
The key question for specification: does the project require full blackout and meaningful acoustic absorption from a single curtain, or is acoustic performance secondary to light control? The answer determines whether a multi-layer panel is the right approach or whether acoustic treatment should be handled separately.
Fire retardancy requirements
In most US commercial applications, curtains must meet NFPA 701 fire-test requirements. This applies to acoustic curtains the same way it applies to blackout or decorative curtains — the fabric and construction must pass the relevant test standard.
For hospitality and commercial projects, fire retardancy is not optional. It is a code requirement in most jurisdictions. When evaluating acoustic curtains, confirm that the acoustic-grade fabric and any additional linings or layers are included in the fire-test certification, not just the face fabric alone.
Acoustic and fire-retardant requirements often overlap during specification. Rather than treating them as separate product decisions, confirm both requirements during the initial project discussion to avoid specification conflicts later.

When layering is needed
Some performance combinations cannot be achieved in a single curtain panel. If the acoustic requirement is high (NRC above 0.60) and the project also requires full blackout and verified fire retardancy, a layered approach, such as acoustic curtain plus blackout liner or dual-track installation, may be more reliable than expecting a single panel to satisfy every requirement.
Confirm layering needs early in the project. Adding a second track or liner after installation is more disruptive and expensive than specifying it from the start.
How to evaluate noise-reducing fabric curtains for commercial interiors
Before selecting a product, confirm these project parameters:
- Application type: Is this a window treatment, a space divider, a stage curtain, or a corridor element? The application determines mounting, fullness, and how the curtain interacts with the room's acoustic profile.
- Primary noise problem: Is the issue echo and reverberation within a room, or noise transmission between spaces? Fabric curtains address the first problem well. The second problem requires barriers, not absorbers.
- Performance target: Is there a specific NRC value required by the project's acoustic consultant, or is the goal general noise improvement? Specification-driven projects need curtains with tested NRC data. General improvement projects have more flexibility.
- Fire compliance: Confirm whether the application requires NFPA 701 or another fire standard. This affects which fabrics and constructions are eligible.
- Blackout or light-control needs: If the same curtain must address both acoustics and light blocking, confirm that the combined construction meets both requirements without compromising either.
- Timeline: Custom acoustic curtains for commercial projects require lead time for fabric selection, construction, and quality review. Confirm project timelines during the initial discussion so that curtain delivery aligns with the installation schedule.
Through the TheHues trade program, designers, FF&E teams, and project managers can confirm acoustic curtain suitability, review construction options, and align curtain specification with broader project requirements.
Frequently asked questions
Do fabric curtains soundproof a room?
No. Fabric curtains absorb sound within a room, reducing echo and reverberation. They do not block sound transmission between rooms. If the project requires sound isolation — such as between a hotel guest room and a corridor — that requires structural barriers or engineered partitions, not fabric curtains.
What NRC rating should I look for in commercial acoustic curtains?
When comparing NRC rating curtains from different suppliers, context matters. For most commercial interior applications, NRC 0.50 to 0.65 provides meaningful acoustic improvement. Higher NRC values (0.70+) are achievable with heavier fabrics or multi-layer constructions but are typically specified for dedicated acoustic environments like studios or performance spaces. Confirm the NRC value with the curtain hung at the intended fullness, not just flat-hang test data.
Can acoustic curtains also provide blackout?
Yes, depending on the construction. Multi-layer curtains can combine acoustic-grade fabric weight with blackout lining in a single panel. However, not every acoustic curtain is a blackout curtain, and not every blackout curtain offers meaningful acoustic absorption. Confirm both performance requirements during specification rather than assuming one product covers both.
Do acoustic curtains need to be fire-retardant for commercial projects?
In most US commercial and hospitality applications, yes. NFPA 701 is the standard fire test for curtains and drapery in commercial buildings. Some jurisdictions reference additional standards. Confirm the applicable fire requirement for your project location and application before finalizing acoustic curtain specification.
How does curtain fullness affect acoustic performance?
More fullness means more fabric surface area exposed to the sound field, which increases absorption. A curtain hung at 50% fullness absorbs measurably more sound than the same fabric hung flat. This is why flat-hang NRC data alone can understate the acoustic performance of a pleated installation. Confirm the intended fullness level with the acoustic specification to ensure alignment.
Can acoustic curtains be used as room dividers?
Yes. Acoustic fabric curtains on ceiling-mounted tracks can divide open spaces while absorbing sound on both sides. This is common in hospitality public areas, coworking environments, and event spaces. Confirm that the track system, curtain weight, and fire compliance all support the divider application.
Next step
Acoustic curtain specification depends on the project: the application, the noise problem, the performance target, and how acoustic requirements interact with blackout, fire retardancy, and design intent. The right starting point is a project discussion, not a product page.
Discuss your project with TheHues' team to confirm acoustic curtain suitability, review construction options, and align specification with your project requirements and timeline.