A door closes that nobody touched. A voice says something just out of hearing distance. The lights flicker once. Horror works on details exactly that small, and these 101 clips supply the audio half: chilling whispers, distant female wails, haunted moans, demonic laughter laid in low for the dread end of the spectrum, and short startle stings sized for jump-scare cuts. The recordings are dry, with minimal stock reverb baked in — the room you're scoring needs to own its own space, not borrow someone else's.
Paranormal-investigation YouTube channels use the whispers and the EVP-style fragments more than anything else — they fit the format. Trailer and feature horror work uses the moans and the demonic laughter, usually pitch-shifted further down to become 'a thing' rather than 'someone'. Indie game devs working on first-person horror reach for the door-creak adjuncts and the breathing-behind-you takes. Grab whatever the scene needs — free to download for any project, no signup wall and no watermark to crop.