

If you are hidden-both unseen and unheard-when you make an attack, you give away your location when the attack hits or misses.

Similarly the section on Unseen Attackers and Targets states: No part of its description describes it as making the rider silent, and so they are not silent. However, a person riding a broom is no more or less silent then they are when not riding it.Ī creature riding the broom will make noise Personally, I would treat it like all the brooms that I have in my closet when they aren’t hitting or scraping on something else they are silent, when they are, they aren’t. They might be found because of the noise they or the broom makes or for any other reason.Īn unridden broom can’t hide because it isn’t a creature although a creature could hide it, however, if it was moving by itself it would no longer be in that hiding place.Įach DM can decide if the broom makes noise from the limits of being absolutely silent to always singing arias. It’s description is silent as to if it’s silent.Ī person riding the broom can hide because nothing in the description says they can’t and they can be found by a creature who succeeds on a Perception check.

The broom comes back to you when you speak another command word, provided that the broom is still within 1 mile of you. You can send the broom to travel alone to a destination within 1 mile of you if you speak the command word, name the location, and are familiar with that place. It can carry up to 400 pounds, but its flying speed becomes 30 feet while carrying over 200 pounds. It then hovers beneath you and can be ridden in the air. This wooden broom, which weighs 3 pounds, functions like a mundane broom until you stand astride it and speak its command word.
