Calls and meetings
Lower music during calls on Mac
Calls often start quickly. Auto Ducking keeps the volume behavior ready before the meeting app needs your microphone.
Mac lower music during call
How can you lower background music during Mac calls?
Auto Ducking can lower Mac background music when a call or meeting app activates the microphone, then restore the previous volume after microphone use ends. It is useful when music, video, or ambient audio is playing before a call and you want it to become quieter while you speak. You choose the lower volume level, restore delay, fade timing, app trigger rules, and hotkeys. Auto Ducking watches microphone activity rather than call content, so it does not record, transcribe, or upload audio. It works at the Mac system output volume level and should be treated as a focused call-friendly volume utility, not a conferencing app or professional audio mixer.
Call workflows it supports
Use it when the key job is lowering background output volume while your microphone is in use.
Meetings
Lower music while a meeting app is using the microphone.
Voice and video calls
Keep background audio quieter without stopping playback entirely.
Quick interruptions
Restore delay helps avoid volume jumps during short pauses.
Set up call-friendly ducking
01
Choose the ducking level
Set how quiet background audio should become while your microphone is active.
02
Set restore timing
Use restore delay and fade controls so short pauses do not create abrupt volume jumps.
03
Pick app trigger rules
Use every microphone app, selected apps only, or exclusions for workflows that should not trigger ducking.
04
Keep control from the menu bar
Use the menu bar and global hotkeys to pause Auto Ducking, restore volume, or trigger manual ducking.
Call limits
- Auto Ducking adjusts Mac system output volume. It is not an audio editor, recorder, compressor, noise remover, or full per-app mixer.
- Some output devices cannot be controlled by software. Auto Ducking shows an unsupported-output status when macOS does not allow volume control.
- Auto Ducking detects microphone activity so it can change volume. It does not record audio, transcribe speech, or upload microphone audio.
- Do not describe Auto Ducking as replacing professional recording tools or as guaranteeing behavior inside every third-party app.
Calls and meetings FAQ
Does Auto Ducking record my microphone?
No. Auto Ducking does not record audio, transcribe speech, or upload microphone audio. It detects microphone activity and adjusts system output volume.
What happens when the microphone turns off?
Auto Ducking restores the previous Mac volume after your chosen restore delay, so short pauses do not cause sudden volume changes.
Can I choose how much the volume is lowered?
Yes. You can set the ducking level, fade down timing, fade restore timing, and restore delay.
Is Auto Ducking a full audio mixer?
No. Auto Ducking is focused on microphone-triggered system volume automation, not full per-app routing, recording, effects, or mastering.
Let calls lower background audio automatically
Use Auto Ducking from the menu bar before the next call starts.
Related Auto Ducking pages
Auto Ducking
Auto Ducking is a Mac microphone volume utility that lowers background audio when your mic becomes active, then restores volume when microphone use ends.
Auto Ducking Privacy
Learn how Auto Ducking handles microphone activity, local settings, usage statistics, purchases, and support contact data.
Lower Mac volume when the microphone is active
Use Auto Ducking to lower Mac background audio when a microphone app becomes active, then restore the previous volume when microphone use ends.
Mac audio ducking for recording and streaming
Use Auto Ducking for simple Mac system-output ducking during recording, streaming, podcast prep, and microphone workflows.
Adjust the ducking level on Mac
Choose how quiet Mac background audio gets while the microphone is active, with restore delay, fade timing, presets, and hotkeys.