Due to recent advancements in Large Audio-Language Models (LALMs) that demonstrate remarkable performance across a range of sound-, speech- and music-related tasks, there is a growing interest in proposing benchmarks to assess these models. Existing benchmarks generally focus only on reasoning with internal knowledge, neglecting real-world scenarios that require external information grounding. To bridge this gap, we introduce AudioRAG, a novel benchmark designed to evaluate audio-based reasoning augmented by information retrieval in realistic web environments. This benchmark comprises both LLM-generated and manually curated question-answer pairs. Our evaluations reveal that even the state-of-the-art LALMs struggle to answer these questions. We therefore propose an agentic pipeline that integrates audio reasoning with retrieval-augmented generation, providing a stronger baseline for future research.