The aim of this study is to compare the dosimetric performance of two CT acquisition protocols for the petrous bone: a standard fixed mAs protocol and a protocol using tube current modulation (TCM). By analyzing the scan length, dose-length product (DLP) and effective dose (ED) obtained with each protocol, we investigate whether TCM offers an advantage in terms of dose reduction while maintaining comparable image quality. To this end, 249 patients (women: 52%; men: 48%) were included in this study. The first center used TCM (120 kVp, 150 mA reference) for image acquisition, while the other centers opted for fixed mAs values. Acceptability of image quality was assessed using a standardized phantom (model 610 AAPM) by measuring noise uniformity and accuracy, contrast-to-noise ratio (CNR) and spatial resolution. The CTDIvol was not significantly different between center A and the other centers (p > 0.05), while DLP and ED were significantly different (p < 0.001), being reduced by a factor of 2 and 2.23 for scan length. We concluded that a scan with a 14.28% decrease in tube voltage from 140 kVp (136–170–210) mAs fixed to 120 kVp with TCM to 150 mA reference in helical scan mode can be recommended as an optimized protocol during CT examination of petrous bone while reducing DLP and ED to 50% without loss of diagnostic accuracy.