As a consequence of their high strength, small thickness, and high flexibility, ultrathin graphene membranes show great potential for pressure and sound sensing applications. This study investigates the performance of multi-layer graphene membranes for microphone applications in the presence of air-loading. Since microphones need a flatband response over the full audible bandwidth, they require a sufficiently high mechanical resonance frequency. Reducing membrane thickness facilitates meeting this bandwidth requirement, and therefore, also allows increasing compliance and sensitivity of the membranes. However, at atmospheric pressure, air-loading effects can increase the effective mass, and thus, reduce the bandwidth of graphene and other 2D material-based microphones. To assess the severity of this performance-limiting effect, we characterize the acoustic response of multi-layer graphene membranes with a thickness of 8 nm in the pressure range from 30 to 1000 mbar, in air and helium environments. A bandwidth reduction by a factor ∼2.8× for membranes with a diameter of 500 μm is observed. These measurements show that air-loading effects, which are usually negligible in conventional microphones, can lead to a substantial bandwidth reduction in ultrathin graphene microphones. With analytical and finite element models, we further analyze the performance limits of graphene microphones in the presence of air-loading effects.