By Penelope Woods, MAudSt, MAudA (CCP), BMus, is a master’s qualified independent audiologist and hearing health advocate serving the Redlands community.
A “Free hearing aid” offer can be very hard to ignore.
It lands in the letterbox, pops up on Facebook, or comes through as a phone call at just the right moment.
For someone who has been wondering whether hearing care might finally be worth looking into, it can sound like a safe first step. Sensible, even.
Sometimes it is. But not always.
The problem is that “free” can pull attention to the least important part of the decision. It makes the whole question sound as if it is only about the upfront price, when good hearing care is really about something else.
Is the advice clear? Will my clinical circumstances be explained? Is the recommendation a good fit? Are there real options? Will there be enough support afterwards to help the person succeed in daily life?
That is where people can get caught out.
A hearing aid is not just an object handed over at the end of an appointment. It is part of a much bigger process.
The assessment matters. The explanation matters. The choice of device matters. The fitting matters. The fine tuning matters. The follow up matters.
If those parts are rushed, unclear, limited, or shaped more by a promotion than by the person’s actual needs, the offer may feel less valuable once real life begins.
This is one of the professional truths that often goes unexplained.
People do not usually struggle because they were given “a hearing aid”. They struggle because the device, the plan, or the support around it did not properly match the hearing problem they were living with.
That can show up in all sorts of ways. A person may feel pushed toward a narrow range of options. They may not fully understand what is included and what is not. They may leave without a clear sense of what happens if the hearing aids feel odd.
The result is not always financial regret. Sometimes it is loss of confidence. Sometimes it is confusion. Sometimes it is a long delay before trying again.
At A Better Ear, our team takes a different approach.
We are an independent specialist hearing rehabilitation clinic serving the local community, and every clinician works to the same evidence-based standard.
Our role is not to criticise every promotion or assume all “free” offers are poor. It is to help people slow the process down enough to judge it well.
That means explaining findings clearly, discussing options honestly, being transparent about likely costs and support, and keeping the focus on suitability rather than urgency.
The most useful question is often not, “How much does it cost?” It is, “What kind of care will this lead to over time?”
That question tends to lead people somewhere better. If that is the conversation someone wants to have, A Better Ear can provide it with care, clarity, and consistency.

