exposure workers (75.8±3.2 dBA) and 52 office workers (61.5±0.5 dBA). Personal noise exposure and environmental octave-band analyses were performed at work. Multiple logistic regression models were used to estimate odds ratios (ORs) for hypertension between different noise-exposure categories after adjustment for potential confounders. Male workers exposed to noise levels at high frequencies of 2000, 4000 or 8000 Hz had a higher but non-significant risk of hypertension. Those exposed to ≥80 dBA for 2–4 years, 4–6 years and more than 6 years had a 4.43-fold (95% CI=1.21–16.15), 1.21-fold (95% CI=0.35–4.21) and 0.95-fold (95% CI=0.16–5.60) risk of hypertension, respectively, compared with reference workers. A significant association was only observed in male workers exposed to ≥70 dBA at 4000 Hz for 2–4 years (adjusted OR=4.22; 95% CI=1.15–15.49) and was not found at other frequencies for any periods. These findings suggest that occupational noise exposure above 80 dBA for specific periods may be associated with hypertension, and noise frequency at 4000 Hz may have the greatest effect on hypertension.