AbstractHybrid acoustic prediction combines the use of unsteady computational fluid dynamics for calculating the properties of acoustic sources with some form of Lighthill's acoustic analogy to calculate the resulting far-field noise radiation. This approach avoids some of the difficult issues involved in computing both the acoustic sources and the acoustic propagation in a single computation. However, hybrid acoustic prediction still faces numerous uncertainties associated with the computation of the properties of the acoustic sources, and the coupling of the noise-source computation with the acoustic propagation computation. Several of these uncertainties are discussed, including examples where some of the issues have been successfully resolved