Volume Control Sound Launcher

Volume Control Sound Launcher promises quick swipe access to your volume sliders. The catch is that it replaces your entire home screen to do it. For a tool that solves one job — making music and calls louder — handing over the launcher slot, the wallpaper, and a Yahoo-powered search bar is a big ask.

The seven Volume Control Sound Launcher alternatives below boost volume, balance system audio, or fine-tune your headphone sound without touching your home screen. Most are free, a few have proper presets, and one ships with every Android 10+ device for free.

Quick comparison

AppBest forFree planReplaces launcherStandout feature
Volume Booster GOODEVSimple loudness bumpYes, ad-supportedNoOne slider, no setup
Precise Volume +100-step volume controlLimited trialNoPer-app volume memory
Equalizer FX Sound BoosterMusic tuning + bass boostYes, ad-supportedNo10-band EQ with presets
WaveletHeadphone correctionYes, fully freeNoAutoEQ profile library
SoundAssistantSamsung-grade sound mixingFree (Samsung only)NoApp-by-app routing
Sound AmplifierHearing-aid style boost for callsFree (pre-installed)NoWired-headphone amp + EQ
Volume Booster ProLock-screen volume widgetYes, ad-supportedNoQuick-tile shortcut

Why people leave Volume Control Sound Launcher

Which Volume Control Sound Launcher alternative should you pick?

  1. Volume Booster GOODEV for the simplest loudness bump.
  2. Precise Volume + for fine-grained 100-step control.
  3. Equalizer FX Sound Booster for music tuning with bass boost.
  4. Wavelet if you use headphones and want a flat sound profile.
  5. SoundAssistant if you own a Samsung phone.
  6. Sound Amplifier for calls and hearing-aid use.
  7. Volume Booster Pro for a quick-tile widget.

1. Volume Booster GOODEV, simplest loudness bump

GOODEV's Volume Booster has been on Android since 2013 and remains the most-installed loudness app on the Play Store. The interface is a single slider above the system volume that pushes media audio louder. It does one thing, it does not change your home screen, and it works in the background.

Where it falls short: the boost slider can cause distortion at the top end and on cheap speakers. There is no EQ.

Pricing: Free, with banner ads. There is no paid upgrade.

Migrating from Volume Control Sound Launcher: uninstall the launcher, restore your previous home screen, install GOODEV. Total time under five minutes.

Download: Google Play

Bottom line: the easiest swap if all you wanted was louder music.


2. Precise Volume +, 100-step volume control

Stock Android gives you 15 volume steps. Precise Volume + breaks that into 100, which makes a real difference at low listening levels with sensitive headphones. It also remembers per-app volume, so YouTube can default to 30 while Spotify defaults to 80.

Where it falls short: the free trial limits the equaliser and the in-app upgrade is required for full features. On Android 13+ the volume key remap needs an extra accessibility permission.

Pricing: Free trial. Pro is a one-time purchase of around $4.

Migrating from Volume Control Sound Launcher: install and grant accessibility access. No data carry-over needed.

Download: Google Play

Bottom line: the best pick for headphone users who want true fine-grained control.


3. Equalizer FX Sound Booster, music tuning with bass boost

Equalizer FX adds a 10-band equaliser, a bass boost, a virtualiser, and a loudness slider that works system-wide. It supports presets (Rock, Pop, Bass) plus custom curves, and includes a small home-screen widget for quick toggles.

Where it falls short: the EQ uses Android's built-in audio effects, which not every app honours. Spotify and YouTube respect it; some streaming apps do not.

Pricing: Free, with ads. A paid removal is a small one-time fee.

Migrating from Volume Control Sound Launcher: nothing to transfer. Install, pick a preset, done.

Download: Google Play

Bottom line: the best loudness app with a real equaliser attached.


4. Wavelet, headphone correction for free

Wavelet is the answer most audio enthusiasts give when asked about Android sound apps. It applies an AutoEQ profile to your specific headphones, then layers a 9-band parametric EQ, channel balance, reverb, and a limiter. The AutoEQ library covers thousands of headphones and IEMs.

Where it falls short: it does not boost beyond system maximum, so it is not a "louder" app. The UI is opinionated and assumes you understand basic EQ.

Pricing: Free. A small donation unlocks the legacy version and removes the in-app reminder.

Migrating from Volume Control Sound Launcher: install Wavelet, pick your headphone model from the AutoEQ list, enable.

Download: Google Play

Bottom line: the right swap for anyone who actually wears headphones daily.


5. SoundAssistant, Samsung-grade sound mixing

SoundAssistant is a Samsung Labs app that exposes audio controls hidden in the One UI settings. You get per-app volume sliders, a stereo balance dial, sound-quality enhancements, and a multi-app sound mode that lets two apps play through different outputs simultaneously.

Where it falls short: Samsung Galaxy devices only. It will not install on Pixel, Xiaomi, or other brands.

Pricing: Free.

Migrating from Volume Control Sound Launcher: install from the Galaxy Store and enable in Settings > Sound and Vibration.

Download: Google Play · Samsung Galaxy Store

Bottom line: the deepest sound app for Samsung owners, no compromise.


6. Sound Amplifier, hearing-aid style boost for calls

Google's Sound Amplifier is built into Android 10 and later. It treats your wired headphones or earbuds like a hearing aid: it boosts quiet voices, filters background noise, and gives you a simple boost-by-frequency slider. It works inside any app, including phone calls, video chat, and podcasts.

Where it falls short: it requires wired headphones or specific compatible Bluetooth devices. It is designed for hearing assistance, not for blasting music.

Pricing: Free.

Migrating from Volume Control Sound Launcher: open Settings > Accessibility > Sound Amplifier on Android 10+. No install needed on most phones.

Download: Google Play

Bottom line: the right choice for hearing clarity on calls and podcasts.


7. Volume Booster Pro, lock-screen widget for quick boosts

Volume Booster Pro (by Reesfun) ships a notification-shade widget and a quick-settings tile so you can bump volume without unlocking the phone. The boost slider goes above system maximum and the widget is the most accessible of any app in this list.

Where it falls short: ads are frequent and full-screen on connect. The UI looks dated next to GOODEV.

Pricing: Free with ads. A small paid upgrade removes them.

Migrating from Volume Control Sound Launcher: install and pin the quick-tile.

Download: Google Play

Bottom line: pick this only if the quick-settings widget is non-negotiable.


How to choose

FAQ

Why does Volume Control Sound Launcher change my home screen?
It is technically a launcher app, not a utility. Android only lets one launcher run at a time, so installing it forces the home-screen swap. If you only wanted louder volume, the seven alternatives above leave your launcher alone.

What is the best free volume booster for Android?
Volume Booster GOODEV is the most-installed and easiest to use. Equalizer FX Sound Booster adds a 10-band EQ at no cost. For headphones specifically, Wavelet is the strongest free pick.

Can I boost volume above the system maximum on Android?
Yes, but the apps that do it use audio effects that can distort at high levels. GOODEV and Volume Booster Pro both push past the system cap. Use them in moderation to avoid damaging your speakers or hearing.

Do volume booster apps work on Bluetooth speakers?
Most volume boosters apply effects to the media-output stream, which includes Bluetooth. Some Bluetooth headsets use their own internal volume curve, which can override the app boost. Test before relying on it.