Free · No App · All Android Brands

Android Speaker
Water Eject

Remove water from your Android phone speaker using a 165Hz sound wave — the same ejection frequency used by millions worldwide. Works on Samsung Galaxy, Google Pixel, OnePlus, Xiaomi, Motorola and every Android device. No app. No sign-up. Free forever.

Samsung Pixel OnePlus Xiaomi Motorola All others
165 HzEject frequency
4 minPer cycle
4M+Users helped
FreeAlways
Android Water Eject Tool
Select your brand and eject water
Your Android brand
Cycle duration
165 Hz · Water Eject Frequency
Set volume to MAX · Disconnect Bluetooth · Hold speaker-side down
Round: Run 3× for best results
All Android brands 165Hz ejection tone Free forever Open in Chrome

Brand-specific guide

Water eject for every Android brand

Speaker position and built-in features vary by brand. Here’s what to know for yours.

Samsung Galaxy
S series · A series · Z Fold/Flip

Galaxy S and Z series have a built-in Water Lock in Settings → Advanced Features. For A series without Water Lock, use this tool. Hold phone with USB-C port facing down.

💡 Check Settings → Advanced Features → Water Lock first before using the tool.
Galaxy S24S23A55Z Fold 6Z Flip 6
Google Pixel
Pixel 6 · 7 · 8 · 9 series

Pixel phones have no built-in water eject and use front-facing stereo speakers. Run the tool twice — once bottom-down, once face-down — to address both speakers.

💡 Pixel 9 and 8 are IP68 rated but still trap water in speaker mesh after submersion.
Pixel 9 ProPixel 8Pixel 7aPixel 6
OnePlus
OnePlus 12 · 11 · Nord series

OxygenOS includes Clear Speaker in Settings → Sound. Try that first. Our tool works as a supplement for heavier water exposure.

💡 Settings → Sound → Clear Speaker → run this first, then use the tool if needed.
OnePlus 12OnePlus 11Nord 4
Xiaomi / Redmi / POCO
All MIUI / HyperOS devices

MIUI and HyperOS have a built-in Water Out feature. For Redmi and POCO without this, use our tool. Typical bottom-firing mono speaker — hold USB-C down.

💡 MIUI: Security app → Tools → Water Out. HyperOS: Settings → Special Features → Water Out.
Xiaomi 14Redmi Note 13POCO X6
Motorola
Edge · G series · Razr

No built-in water eject. Edge series uses stereo speakers; G series uses mono. Run twice for Edge, once for G. Hold USB-C port down. Razr: run with phone open and closed.

💡 Motorola Razr fold: run with phone open and closed for both speakers.
Edge 50 ProMoto G85Razr 50
Other Android brands
Sony · ASUS · Realme · Oppo · vivo

All Android phones with Chrome support this tool. Check Settings for any built-in speaker cleaning feature first. Select “Other” in the brand picker above.

💡 Any phone that can open a browser and play audio supports this tool.
Sony XperiaASUS ZenfoneRealme GT

How to use

5 steps to eject water from any Android phone

1
Open in Chrome on your Android

Open myspeakerrepair.com/android/ in Chrome. Chrome ensures full Web Audio API support and clean speaker output on all Android devices.

💡 Samsung Internet also works well on Galaxy devices
2
Turn off Bluetooth

Swipe down from the top and tap Bluetooth to disable. The water eject tone must play through the built-in phone speaker only.

💡 Also disable Do Not Disturb if active — it can mute media audio
3
Volume to maximum

Press volume up until the bar is full. On Samsung: ensure the media volume slider (not ring) is at max — long-press the volume bar to see separate sliders.

💡 The tone plays as media audio, not a ringtone
4
Select brand, tap Eject, hold phone down

Pick your brand, tap Eject Water, then immediately hold the phone with the speaker grille facing the floor. Gravity helps water fall away as vibration dislodges it.

💡 For Pixel stereo speakers: run twice — once bottom-down, once face-down
5
Complete 3 rounds, then air-dry

Run all 3 cycles for best results. After each cycle, wipe the speaker grille with a dry lint-free cloth. Air-dry 30 minutes before charging — do not charge until fully dry.

💡 Do not charge your Android until completely dry

Built-in features

Which Android brands have built-in water eject?

Check your phone’s Settings first. If a built-in feature is available, try that first, then use our tool as a supplement.

BrandBuilt-in feature?Location in SettingsUse this tool?
Samsung Galaxy S/Z✓ YESSettings → Advanced Features → Water LockAs supplement
Samsung Galaxy A✗ NoNot availableAlways
Google Pixel✗ NoNot availableAlways
OnePlus (OxygenOS)✓ YESSettings → Sound → Clear SpeakerAs supplement
Xiaomi (MIUI)✓ YESSecurity app → Tools → Water OutAs supplement
Xiaomi HyperOS✓ YESSettings → Special Features → Water OutAs supplement
Motorola✗ NoNot availableAlways
Sony Xperia✗ NoNot availableAlways
Realme / Oppo / vivo✗ NoNot available on most modelsAlways

FAQ

Android water eject questions

The most effective method is to play a 165Hz sound tone at maximum volume while holding the phone speaker-side down. Open this page in Chrome, set media volume to max, select your brand, and tap Eject Water. Run 2–3 complete cycles for thorough water removal.
Yes, Samsung Galaxy S and Z series include Water Lock in Settings → Advanced Features. Galaxy A series typically does not. If your model lacks this, our tool provides the same 165Hz ejection tone. For Galaxy S24: Settings → Advanced Features → Water Lock → Start.
Yes. Google Pixel phones have no built-in water eject. Open this page in Chrome, select Pixel, and run 2–3 cycles at maximum volume. Pixel phones have front-facing stereo speakers — run the tool twice: once with the phone bottom-down, once face-down, to address both speaker grilles.
Water droplets trapped inside the speaker grille mesh dampen the speaker cone, causing muffled or distorted audio. The speaker mesh must remain open for sound to pass through — which means water can enter and stay. Playing a 165Hz tone at maximum volume vibrates the water out through the mesh openings.
Try 3 more cycles with the phone angled differently. Use our Dust Cleaner tool to remove additional debris. Leave the phone face-down for 30 minutes between attempts. If audio remains distorted after 24 hours of drying, there may be corrosion or physical damage requiring professional repair.