Sealed vs ported subwoofer box: which should you build?
A clear comparison of sealed and ported subwoofer enclosures — sound quality, output, size, and which one is right for music, home theatre or car audio.
The two most common subwoofer enclosures are sealed (closed) and ported (vented, or bass-reflex). Both work well — they just make different trade-offs.
Sealed boxes
A sealed box puts the driver in an airtight enclosure. The trapped air acts like a spring.
- Pros: tight, accurate bass; gentle 12 dB/octave roll-off (so it often plays deeper in a real room than the spec suggests); smaller box; simplest to build; very forgiving of volume errors.
- Cons: a little less maximum output than a ported box of the same driver.
Sealed is the default choice for music and home theatre where accuracy and a small footprint matter.
Ported boxes
A ported box adds a tuned vent. Near the tuning frequency the port reinforces the driver’s output, raising efficiency and SPL.
- Pros: more output and deeper extension around the tuning frequency; the driver moves less near tuning, lowering distortion there.
- Cons: larger box; steep 24 dB/octave roll-off below tuning; port noise if undersized; more sensitive to design and build errors.
Ported suits maximum SPL builds and some car audio, where output is king.
Which should you build?
- Want accuracy, a small box and an easy build? Sealed.
- Want maximum loudness and have the space? Ported.
Every plan on this site is a sealed design, engineered to a precise alignment so you get the tight, accurate bass sealed boxes are known for — with no guesswork.
Frequently asked questions
- Is a sealed or ported box better for sound quality?
- Sealed boxes are generally regarded as more accurate. They have a gentle low-frequency roll-off and tighter transient response, which suits music and home theatre where control matters more than raw output.
- Does a ported box hit harder than a sealed box?
- For a given driver and power, a ported box is louder near its tuning frequency because the port reinforces output. The trade-off is a larger box, a steeper roll-off below tuning, and looser transient response.
- Which box is smaller?
- A sealed box is almost always smaller for the same driver. If space is tight, sealed is usually the practical choice.