<p>Hearing loss is not unique to humans and is experienced by all animals in the face of wild and eclectic differences in ear morphology. Here we exploited the high throughput and accessible tympanal ear of the desert locust, Schistocerca gregaria to rigorously quantify changes in the auditory system due to noise exposure and age. In this exploratory study we analysed tympanal displacements, morphology of the auditory Müller’s organ and measured activity of the auditory nerve, the transduction current and electrophysiological properties of individual auditory receptors. This work shows that hearing loss manifests as a complex disorder due to differential effects of age and noise of several processes and cell types within the ear. The ‘middle-aged deafness’ pattern of hearing loss found in locusts mirrors that found for humans exposed to noise early in their life suggesting a fundamental interaction of the use of an auditory system (noise) and its aging.</p>