Sabins, SAC, & NRC — a practical guide.

When optimizing a room’s acoustics, you’re often balancing how much sound is absorbed (loss) against how much bounces around (reverberation). Some common ways to describe absorption — sabins, SAC, and NRC — look different, but they’re closely related.

Sabins

A sabin is a direct measure of absorption: One sabin equals the sound-absorbing effect of one square foot of a perfectly absorbing surface (like an open window – sound goes out, but doesn’t come back.) In practice, manufacturers or labs will report a component’s equivalent absorption area in sabins at various frequencies. Sabins are additive: add the sabins of all items in a space to get the room’s total absorption for use in reverberation calculations.

Sabins are used to report the absorption of devices like Sonora® Ceiling Clouds and these Cloudscape® Baffles. When all surfaces are exposed to sound, the most accurate method is to report “sabins per unit.”

SAC

Sound absorption coefficients (SAC) are used to simplify large square footage calculations. Each SAC itself is derived from the measured equivalent sabins of a test sample divided by the sample’s area. This allows you to multiply the square footage of a certain material by the SAC and it will tell you how many sabins it will absorb at a certain frequency. You may also see an average of all the SACs, or a subset of those values… a specific, often-used subset is the Noise Reduction Coefficient (NRC).

NRC and how it’s calculated

NRC (Noise Reduction Coefficient) is a number that represents a material’s average absorption performance at mid-to-high frequencies. It’s calculated by taking the arithmetic average of the material’s sound absorption coefficients (SACs) at 250 Hz, 500 Hz, 1000 Hz and 2000 Hz (per ASTM C423 or other standard test procedures). NRC is typically reported to the nearest 0.05 and runs from 0.00 (reflective) to 1.00 (very absorbent). Being an average, it isn’t the most accurate method, but it can give you a quick estimate which can be useful in the planning stages.

When panels are directly mounted to a surface (like these Sonora® Wall Panels), it is sometimes more efficient to calculate the sabins of absorption from the square footage – using either the SACs for specific frequencies, or NRC for a quick average/estimate.

Practical Mathematic Relationship

  • From measured data: SAC = measured sabins ÷ sample area.
  • NRC is the average of SACs across four bands (250 Hz, 500 Hz, 1000 Hz and 2000 Hz).
  • To convert NRC into a working absorption number for a planar surface:
    sabins = NRC × area (ft²).
  • For discrete units (baffles, clouds): manufacturers often give sabins per unit, so total absorption is sabins per unit × number of units.

Why sabins for baffles and NRC for wall/ceiling panels?

Hanging devices like baffles are three-dimensional, exposed on multiple faces, and their effective absorption depends on orientation, spacing, and edge behavior. It’s more accurate and user-friendly to report their absorption as “# sabins per unit.” Flat-mounted wall or ceiling panels cover a known area and behave predictably per square foot, so SAC or an NRC (per ft²) is a convenient, normalized way to estimate absorption across a room.

Putting it into RT60 calculations

RT60 calculations depict the amount of time it takes for a sound to decay 60dB in a particular space with specific treatments. (60dB is roughly a 1000-fold reduction in sound pressure.) Reverberation-time formulas (like Sabine’s) use the room’s total absorption in sabins in the function. A basic average will use NRC × area for planar coverage and add sabins-per-unit for baffles. Sum everything up to get total sabins, then plug that into your RT calculation to estimate RT60.

If using feet your calculation is…
RT60 = 0.049 x Room Volume ÷ Total Sabins

If using metric your calculation is…
RT60 = 0.161 x Room Volume ÷ Total (Metric) Sabins

In summary:
NRC is an area-based average (for flat-coverage estimates); SAC is a sabins per square foot coefficient (for efficient absorption calculations using area); sabins per unit are direct, measured absorption values (better for discrete, hung, multi-faced items).

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