Fix Mic Picks Up System Sounds in Windows 11 Meetings
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Fix Mic Picks Up System Sounds in Windows 11 Meetings

Quick fix: Open Sound settings → More sound settings → Recording tab → (your mic) → Properties → Listen tab. Untick Listen to this device. Also untick Stereo Mix as the default input. The mic was set to monitor system audio, which mixes it into recordings.

You’re on a Zoom or Teams call. Other participants hear your music playing back through your own microphone, or hear echoes of their own voices. The cause is usually one of two things: your mic is set to “listen” to system audio (loopback), or Stereo Mix is selected as input instead of your actual microphone.

Symptom: Microphone picks up system audio (music, video, notifications, other participants’ voices) and sends it to calls.
Affects: Windows 11 (and Windows 10) with audio routing misconfiguration.
Fix time: ~5 minutes.

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What causes this

Three common causes: Mic Listen feature: Windows can route mic input back to your speakers (for testing or for hearing yourself). When this is on, your mic captures the speaker output and rebroadcasts it — feedback loop. Wrong default mic: if Stereo Mix is set as the default communications device instead of your actual mic, every call captures system audio. Speakers near mic: physically, speaker output reaches the mic and gets captured. Headphones eliminate this.

Method 1: Disable mic Listen and confirm correct default device

The standard fix.

  1. Right-click the speaker icon in the system tray → Sound settings.
  2. Scroll to More sound settings. Click it.
  3. Switch to the Recording tab.
  4. For each microphone listed:
    1. Right-click → Properties.
    2. Switch to the Listen tab.
    3. Untick Listen to this device.
    4. Click OK.
  5. Back on the Recording tab, identify your actual microphone (the one you want to use). It should have a green checkmark for default. If not: right-click the correct mic → Set as Default Device. Right-click again → Set as Default Communication Device.
  6. If Stereo Mix appears in the list and is enabled: right-click → Disable. You don’t need Stereo Mix for normal calls.
  7. Test on a call. The mic should now only capture your voice.

This catches the typical “mic captures speakers” case.

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Method 2: Disable Acoustic Echo Cancellation conflict

Use when speakers and mic are physically close (e.g., laptop built-in mic + speakers) and feedback persists.

  1. In Recording tab → (your mic) → Properties:
  2. Switch to the Enhancements tab.
  3. Find Acoustic Echo Cancellation. Confirm it’s On.
  4. Find Noise Suppression. Set to On.
  5. If these aren’t available (some drivers don’t expose them), use app-level alternatives:
    • Zoom: Settings → Audio → Suppress background noise (set to high).
    • Microsoft Teams: Settings → Devices → Noise suppression (set to high).
    • Discord: User Settings → Voice & Video → Noise Suppression (use Krisp).
  6. Krisp (free for up to 60 min/day, krisp.ai) is the most effective third-party noise/echo suppression.

This handles the case where echo is from physical room acoustics, not Windows routing.

Method 3: Use headphones to eliminate the physical feedback path

The most reliable solution for any call setup.

  1. Wear headphones or earbuds during calls instead of using laptop speakers.
  2. With headphones, the speaker output reaches your ears only — not the mic.
  3. For wireless headphones, prefer A2DP stereo profile over HFP (Hands-Free) — see related article on Bluetooth profiles.
  4. If you have a built-in mic + Bluetooth headphones, set the mic to be the laptop mic and audio output to be Bluetooth headphones explicitly in the call app’s settings.
  5. For sustained call quality, a dedicated headset (Logitech H390, Plantronics Voyager, Jabra Evolve) outperforms separate headphones + laptop mic.

Headphones bypass the feedback loop entirely. This is the right setup for any serious call work.

How to verify the fix worked

  • Record yourself in Voice Recorder while music plays. Playback: only your voice should be audible, no music.
  • Join a Teams/Zoom test call (most have a test-meeting feature). Speak — playback your voice. No system audio bleed-through.
  • Open Sound settings → Recording tab → (your mic) → Properties → Listen tab. Listen to this device is unticked.

If none of these work

If feedback persists despite all three methods, three deeper causes apply. Stereo Mix is hidden but active: right-click in empty space of Recording tab → tick “Show Disabled Devices.” If Stereo Mix appears, right-click → Disable. Driver-side audio loopback: some Realtek drivers expose “recording playback” in their custom control panel separate from Windows. Open Realtek Audio Console → check Recording or Mixer settings for active loopback. Disable. App-side loopback: OBS Studio, Streamlabs, or recording apps may be routing audio in ways that affect calls. Close them during calls.

Bottom line: Mic capturing system audio is the Listen feature, Stereo Mix as input, or speaker-to-mic feedback — disable Listen, set the correct default mic, use headphones to eliminate physical feedback.

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