The 5 Worst Things Dry Air Does to Your Voice
You don't notice it happening. You sit down, the cabin door closes, and somewhere over the Atlantic the air around you turns drier than the Sahara. Your voice is the first thing to feel it, even if you don't say a word for the next eight hours.
Here's what's actually going on in there.
01
It dries out your vocal folds

Your vocal folds aren't ropes. They're thin strips of tissue that vibrate hundreds of times a second, gliding against each other on a slick film of mucus. Dry air pulls that film away. Without it, the folds collide harder, swell a little, and start to feel raw. The throat equivalent of running barefoot on a hot road.
02
It thickens the mucous that's left

Your body notices and overreacts. It produces more mucus, but stickier and harder to clear. You catch yourself coughing, swallowing, clearing your throat between sentences. The brightness in your voice goes flat. People start asking if you're getting sick.
03
It makes you work harder for every note

When your folds are tacky, they resist vibrating. You push more air through them without realizing it, tense more muscles, work harder for the same sound. Half an hour into a conversation you're tired in a way you can't quite place. By the time you land, talking feels like lifting weights.
04
It shrinks your range

Vocal tissue needs water to stretch. Without it, your folds lose their give. The top of your range goes first. Notes you normally hit clean start to scratch or crack. Singers call this the "crunchy" feeling. For everyone else, it's the moment your voice breaks mid-sentence and you wonder when you turned sixteen again.
05
It leaves you hoarse the next morning

Spend long enough in dry air and the damage settles in. A raspy edge when you wake up. Most people sleep with their mouth open at altitude, which makes all of it worse. You open your eyes with a voice that sounds borrowed from someone else, and sometimes it takes hours to come back.
Kuvola: the humidifier TOP artists use

Airplanes are drier than the Sahara Desert.
Kuvola is a humidifier mask built for flights, and trusted by the biggest names in music.
It provides you with air at the right humidity for the whole journey, so you step off the plane sounding like yourself.
Try one on your next flight. If you don't feel the difference, send it back within 30 days for a full refund.





















