Soundproofing Apartment Walls: Does Adding Drywall Actually Work?
If you can hear your neighbor's TV, their dog, or every word of their phone calls through the wall, you're not imagining it — and you're not alone. Thin shared walls are one of the most common complaints we hear from renters and owners across Dallas, from Uptown apartments to Oak Cliff duplexes and Deep Ellum lofts. The question almost everyone asks is the same: "Can I just add a layer of drywall to make it quieter?" The honest answer is yes, adding drywall helps — but how you add it matters far more than whether you add it at all.
Why Dallas apartment walls let so much noise through
A lot of the noise problem comes down to how the building was built. Older ranch-style homes and mid-century houses converted into rentals often have walls that were never designed for modern sound expectations. Newer Dallas construction — and there's a lot of it — frequently uses a single layer of drywall on studs with minimal insulation in the cavity, which is fast to build but acoustically thin. In both cases, sound travels two ways: through the air (voices, TV, music passing through gaps and thin material) and through the structure itself (footsteps, slamming doors, bass that travels through the framing). Knowing which type of noise you're fighting decides what actually works.
Does adding a layer of drywall help?
Yes — mass blocks sound, and drywall is mass. Adding a second layer of 5/8" drywall over an existing wall will measurably reduce airborne noise like conversation and television. But a plain second layer alone gives you a modest improvement, not silence. The reason is that the two layers are rigidly connected, so vibration passes straight through. To get a real, noticeable difference, you need to do more than just stack drywall.
What actually works: the proven upgrades
When we soundproof a shared wall in a Dallas home or apartment, we combine several techniques rather than relying on one:
Add mass with a second layer of 5/8" drywall. Thicker, denser board blocks more sound than standard 1/2" drywall. This is the foundation of almost every soundproofing job.
Decouple the layers with resilient channel or sound clips. These create a small gap so the new drywall isn't rigidly attached to the old wall, which interrupts the vibration path. This single step often makes the biggest difference.
Add a damping compound between layers. Products like Green Glue convert sound energy into tiny amounts of heat between two sheets of drywall. It's inexpensive and dramatically improves performance.
Use specialty soundproofing board. Pre-made products like QuietRock combine mass and damping in a single panel, which saves space.
Fill the cavity. If the wall is open or being rebuilt, mineral wool or dense fiberglass in the stud cavity absorbs sound that would otherwise resonate inside the wall.
Don't forget the gaps
Sound behaves like water — it finds every opening. Outlets, switch boxes, gaps around baseboards, and the seam where the wall meets the ceiling all leak noise. A proper soundproofing job seals these with acoustical caulk and back-boxes. Skipping this step is the most common reason a DIY attempt disappoints.
One Texas factor to watch: foundation movement
Dallas soil expands and contracts with our wet-then-dry seasons, and that movement can open small cracks where walls meet — exactly the gaps that leak sound. If your wall already shows hairline cracks at the corners or seams, those should be properly repaired and sealed as part of the soundproofing job, not just covered over. Otherwise the gaps will keep letting noise through.
What about apartments, HOAs, and rentals?
Before any work begins, check your building's rules. Many Dallas apartment complexes and HOA communities require approval for wall work, and rentals need landlord sign-off. The good news is that soundproofing a wall from the inside of your own unit usually doesn't touch the building structure, so it's often easier to get approved than people expect. We're happy to provide a clear scope of work you can submit to your management or HOA.
What it costs and what to expect
Cost depends on the wall size and how many techniques you combine, but most single-wall soundproofing projects in Dallas are a one-to-two-day job. You'll lose roughly an inch to two inches of room depth, the wall gets re-taped and finished smooth, and it's ready for primer and paint. If the existing wall has cracks or holes to address first, our drywall repair team handles that as part of the same visit.
Get a free soundproofing estimate
If noise through a shared wall is wearing you down, it can almost always be improved — the key is using the right combination of methods for your specific wall. Dallas Wall Repair installs soundproof walls across the Dallas metro. Call (323) 827-8011 or visit dallaswallrepair.com for a free estimate, and we'll tell you honestly what level of quiet you can expect.

