Suffering From Hearing Loss After Police Service? You Could Be Owed Thousands.
Policing is a noisy career, and the damage often only becomes obvious years later. Firearms training, vehicle and personal sirens, public order incidents, helicopter support and busy control rooms all expose officers to levels of noise that can permanently damage hearing — particularly where ear protection was not provided, not enforced, or simply not practical in the moment.
Noise-induced hearing loss is cumulative and irreversible. Many officers and former officers find they struggle to follow conversations, need the television uncomfortably loud, or live with constant tinnitus that disrupts sleep and concentration. If your employer failed to protect your hearing, you have every right to claim.
Scottish Claims Helpline handles police hearing loss claims across Scotland on a no win no fee basis. There is no financial risk to you, and claims can be brought against Police Scotland or the legacy forces that merged into it in 2013.
How Much Could You Receive?
| Severity | Typical Award |
| Total deafness and severe tinnitus | £42,730 - £82,030 |
| Severe bilateral hearing loss with tinnitus | £14,900 - £42,730 |
| Moderate hearing loss with some tinnitus | £6,970 - £14,900 |
| Mild hearing loss | £6,970 - £11,290 |
| Tinnitus alone (severe) | £14,900 - £27,890 |
| Tinnitus alone (moderate) | £6,970 - £14,900 |
Based on Judicial College Guidelines for general damages (pain, suffering and loss of amenity).
That’s not all. Most claimants also receive special damages on top of the figures above — the cost of hearing aids (including future replacements and batteries), any lost earnings where hearing loss affected your career or forced an early exit, and other expenses linked to the condition. Where your exposure spanned more than one role or force, the claim can reflect the full period.
Who Can Claim?
Any serving or former police officer, special constable or member of police staff who has developed hearing loss or tinnitus as a result of occupational noise can claim. This includes firearms officers, response and traffic officers, public order units, dog handlers, air support crew, custody staff and control room operators. Unlike the armed forces, the police service has never had Crown immunity for these claims, so there is no pre-1987 cut-off — what matters is the noise exposure and your date of knowledge.
Police Hearing Loss Claims — Frequently Asked Questions
Police hearing loss compensation under the Judicial College Guidelines ranges from around £6,970 for mild noise-induced hearing loss to £82,030 for total deafness with severe tinnitus. Moderate bilateral hearing loss with tinnitus typically attracts £14,900–£42,730. Special damages for hearing aids, lost earnings and associated costs are paid on top of these figures.
The most common causes are firearms and weapons training (especially without adequate ear defenders), prolonged exposure to vehicle and personal sirens, public order and crowd-control incidents, helicopter and air support noise, and custody and control room environments. Noise-induced hearing loss develops gradually from repeated exposure above 85 decibels and is cumulative and irreversible.
Yes. Police Scotland and its predecessor forces owe officers and staff the same duty under the Control of Noise at Work Regulations 2005 as any other employer, including noise risk assessments, hearing protection and health surveillance. Unlike the armed forces, the police service has never had Crown immunity for these claims, so there is no pre-1987 cut-off date. Former officers and retired personnel can also claim.
3 years from your date of knowledge under the Prescription and Limitation (Scotland) Act 1973 — not from the date the noise exposure happened. The date of knowledge is usually when an audiogram or ENT report first links your hearing loss to occupational noise. This means officers diagnosed recently can still claim for exposure going back many years. Contact us as soon as possible so the time limit does not pass.
Yes. Many police hearing loss claims are brought by retired officers who only notice the extent of their hearing loss after leaving the service. As long as you are within 3 years of your date of knowledge, retirement does not prevent a claim. Claims can be made against the relevant force or its insurers, including service in the legacy forces that merged into Police Scotland in 2013.
Yes. The key evidence is an audiogram showing the pattern of your hearing loss and an ENT specialist report linking it to noise exposure. Noise-induced hearing loss has a distinctive signature — a notch in hearing sensitivity around 4kHz. Your solicitor arranges these assessments as part of a no win no fee claim at no upfront cost to you.
How Do I Start My Claim?
It takes 2 minutes. Fill in our short form and one of our specialist Scottish solicitors will call you back at a time that suits. They will listen to what happened, tell you straight away if you have a claim, and explain exactly how much you could receive — all completely free and with no obligation. If you decide to go ahead, everything is handled for you on a no win no fee basis from start to finish. You pay nothing unless you win.
About this page: Written by
David Gildea, Scottish Claims Helpline. Last reviewed: May 2026. Scottish Claims Helpline is authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority (
FRN 830381).