Crackling or popping from a smart display speaker usually comes from a broken audio signal path: loose connections, wireless dropouts, interference, overloaded speakers, software bugs, or physical speaker damage. The fastest fix is to isolate whether the noise follows one app, one connection method, one power outlet, or the display itself.
Does your smart display pop right after a voice reply, crackle during a video call, or snap when you cast music from your phone? A 10-minute source-by-source test can usually separate a settings issue from a failing speaker without opening the device.
Why Smart Display Speakers Crackle or Pop

Crackling is a sharp, intermittent sound that interrupts normal playback, while buzzing is usually steadier and lower in pitch. Most crackles start with interrupted audio signals, where the speaker driver receives an unstable electrical command and moves abruptly instead of smoothly.
Smart displays add more possible failure points than a basic monitor speaker. Audio may travel from an app, through a wireless or wired connection, into the display’s processor, through system audio routing, and finally into a compact speaker module. A small delay, bad cable, weak signal, or overloaded amplifier stage can show up as a pop, snap, or gritty edge on voices.
The compact design matters too. Smart displays prioritize screen, camera, microphone, and touch hardware, while smart speakers often leave more internal room for dedicated audio components; smart displays add a touchscreen and camera-style functions that change their physical design priorities. That does not mean smart displays should sound bad, but it does mean they are less forgiving when volume, placement, or processing settings are pushed too hard.
The Most Common Causes
Loose, Dirty, or Poor Connections

If the crackle happens with HDMI, AUX, USB-C, or an external speaker cable, check the physical path first. Loose connectors and damaged cables are common because even a brief signal break can produce a click or pop, and faulty cables and connectors can also introduce buzzing, hissing, or unclear sound.
A practical test is to play the same video through the display’s built-in app, then through the connected source. If the built-in app sounds clean but the HDMI laptop crackles, the display speakers are probably not the first suspect. Replace the cable, try another port, and remove adapters from the chain before assuming the display is defective.
Wireless Dropouts and Casting Problems
Casting and screen mirroring can make audio fragile because the phone, router, display receiver, and app all have to stay in sync. Screen-mirroring audio failures can happen anywhere in the casting chain, especially when wireless audio devices reconnect in the background or network congestion causes packet loss.
For a desk display or kitchen smart screen, test one local file, one video stream, and one voice assistant response. If only one app crackles, suspect the app or stream. If every wireless source crackles but wired HDMI is clean, move the display and phone to the same strong 5 GHz network, reboot the router, and temporarily turn off nearby wireless audio devices.
Speaker Overload and Aggressive EQ
Small display speakers can sound surprisingly loud near a desk, but they still have limited driver movement and amplifier power. Excessive bass boost, maxed-out EQ, or running volume near the top can overload the speaker, and excessive bass, midrange, or treble boosts are a known path to distortion in audio systems.
A simple real-world check is to set the display volume around 50%, flatten EQ or sound effects, and replay the same track. If the crackle disappears, the speaker is being pushed beyond its clean range. This fix costs nothing, but you may need an external speaker or soundbar if you want room-filling volume from a compact smart display.
Electrical Interference and Power Noise
Nearby routers, cell phones, LED lights, laptops, and power adapters can leak noise into poorly shielded audio paths. Electrical interference is especially plausible when the pop appears only on a desk crowded with chargers, hubs, and cables.
Move the display at least a few feet away from the router, separate audio cables from power cords, and test another outlet. If the sound changes when a charger, lamp, or USB hub is unplugged, the speaker may be fine but the environment is noisy. This is common in productivity setups where one power strip feeds a monitor, laptop dock, phone charger, speakers, and desk light.
Software, Firmware, and Assistant Bugs
Smart displays are computers with speakers attached, so firmware can cause audio artifacts. Device support flows often start with basic state checks such as power, internet, network connection, microphone status, and rebooting, because smart displays depend on both device hardware and cloud-connected assistant software.
This is where testing matters. If crackling appears only after voice assistant replies, after wake sounds, or after a recent update, restart the display, update the companion app, and check for firmware updates. Some user reports describe crackling that persisted after a factory reset but disappeared after a later firmware update, so a stubborn pop is not always a blown speaker.
Wrong Audio Output or Muted Routing
A smart display can route audio to built-in speakers, wireless devices, HDMI ARC, optical output, or an external system, depending on the model. When the wrong output is selected, the result may be silence, intermittent audio, or strange handoff noises. Smart board troubleshooting starts with confirming whether built-in speakers are selected when internal audio is intended.
This is especially relevant after pairing headphones or a wireless speaker. Your display may still be trying to hand audio to an unavailable device, then falling back to internal speakers with a pop. Unpair unused wireless outputs, set the internal speaker as default, restart the display, and test again.
How to Diagnose It Without Guesswork

Start with a controlled playback test. Use one familiar video or song at moderate volume, then try it through the built-in app, a cast from your phone, a wireless audio connection, HDMI, and any external speaker output your display supports. The goal is to find the exact condition that makes the noise appear.
Symptom Pattern |
Likely Cause |
Best First Move |
Crackles only on one app |
App stream, codec, or software bug |
Test another app and update the app |
Crackles only when casting |
Wireless routing or network congestion |
Reconnect on a strong network and disable wireless audio |
Crackles only at high volume |
Speaker overload or EQ distortion |
Lower volume and flatten EQ |
Crackles on every source |
Speaker damage, power noise, or firmware fault |
Reboot, update, and test another outlet |
Pops during HDMI ARC switching |
Format handoff or ARC settings |
Test PCM/pass-through and another HDMI cable |
For display-heavy setups, also check audio-video processing. Smart display sync problems are often caused extra processing in the signal chain, and the same processing chain can expose pops during source changes, format switching, or heavy picture enhancement. Disable motion smoothing and enhancement modes while testing, then turn them back on only if the audio remains stable.
Wired Versus Wireless: Why the Connection Matters
Wireless audio is convenient, but it adds compression, latency, and more chances for retries or dropouts. Phone-projection audio research shows the same broader principle: wired phone projection uses an uncompressed path, while wireless projection applies a quality ceiling and can be more vulnerable to software and transmission issues.
That does not mean every smart display needs a cable. For video calls, recipes, casual streaming, and desk music, wireless playback is often good enough. But if crackling appears during wireless casting and disappears through HDMI or USB-C, the cleaner path is the more reliable path. For a portable smart screen used as a productivity display, a short, certified cable is often the highest-value upgrade.
When It Is Probably Hardware Damage
Hardware becomes more likely when the crackle follows every app, every connection type, every volume level, and every outlet. Dust, moisture, physical impact, torn cones, loose internal components, and damaged coils can all create real speaker noise, and damaged internal parts are a known cause of buzzing or crackling.
Look for patterns. A speaker that rattles only on bass-heavy notes may have a loose grille or damaged driver. A display that pops after being dropped may have a connector or speaker module issue. A device that crackles after screen repair may have pressure, grounding, or connector seating problems rather than two speakers failing at once.
Repair, Replace, or Add External Audio?

If the display is under warranty and crackles across every source after a reset and update, replacement is usually the cleanest option. The benefit is predictable performance; the drawback is downtime and possible setup friction. If the display is out of warranty but still excellent as a screen, external audio may be smarter than repair.
External speakers, a soundbar, or a compact USB audio device can bypass weak internal speakers and deliver better output for gaming, office calls, and streaming. The tradeoff is desk space and cable management. For productivity displays and portable smart screens, the best value often comes from keeping the screen and upgrading the audio path only where the built-in speakers fall short.
FAQ
Why does my smart display pop after audio stops?
A pop after playback often points to the amplifier or software muting circuit changing state. It can also happen during wireless or casting handoffs. Restart the device, update firmware, and test whether the pop happens after every source or only after one app.
Can Wireless Networking Really Cause Speaker Crackling?
Yes, when the crackle happens during casting or screen mirroring. Wireless playback depends on stable transmission, decoding, and routing, so network congestion or device handoff can sound like audio breakup rather than a normal buffering pause.
Is Crackling Dangerous for the Speaker?
Occasional software pops are usually not dangerous, but repeated distortion at high volume can stress small drivers. If lowering volume and flattening EQ removes the crackle, keep those settings conservative or use external speakers.
Clean Sound Starts With Isolation
A smart display that crackles is not automatically broken. Test the source, connection, volume, power, and firmware in that order, then decide whether the fix is a setting change, a better cable, cleaner wireless conditions, or hardware service. For an immersive screen setup, reliable audio is part of performance, not an afterthought.







