Vocal Range Test

Find your lowest and highest comfortable notes, calculate your vocal range in semitones and octaves, and get an approximate voice type.

This is a singing-friendly guide, not a medical or professional voice classification. Stay comfortable and do not force extreme notes.

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Guided vocal range test
Save your lowest and highest comfortable notes, then calculate your range and approximate voice type on this page.
StartLow noteHigh noteResult
Ready to test
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Lowest note
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Highest note
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Start with a comfortable voice

Use a gentle warmup first. This test works best when you save notes you can hold comfortably, not notes you have to force.

Safe testing

  • Measure comfortable notes, not forced extremes.
  • Stop if you feel strain, pain, or throat pressure.
  • Use a teacher or coach for serious voice classification.
Test flow

How to test your vocal range

The tool guides you through a comfortable low note and high note, then calculates the range in the same page.

1

Warm up gently

Use a relaxed voice before testing. The goal is a comfortable range, not the loudest or most strained sound you can make.

2

Save your lowest note

Sing or hum downward until you reach the lowest note you can hold comfortably, then save the detected pitch.

3

Save your highest note

Move upward carefully and save the highest comfortable note. The result appears on the same page with range and voice type guidance.

What the vocal range test shows

A useful vocal range result should explain the numbers, not just print a note pair.

Lowest note

The lowest comfortable pitch you saved during the guided test.

Highest note

The highest comfortable pitch you saved without shouting or forcing your voice.

Range in semitones

The distance between the low and high note, useful for comparing vocal range tests over time.

Range in octaves

A singer-friendly summary of your current range, calculated directly from the saved notes.

Approximate voice type

A practical estimate such as bass, baritone, tenor, alto, mezzo-soprano, or soprano, with clear limits explained.

Copyable result

Copy your result for notes, lessons, practice logs, or a future retest.

Voice type chart for context

Voice type depends on more than range, but these reference ranges help make the result easier to understand.

Lower voices

Bass often sits around E2-E4, baritone around A2-A4, and tenor around C3-C5. These are approximate reference ranges.

Higher voices

Alto often sits around F3-F5, mezzo-soprano around A3-A5, and soprano around C4-C6. Training and comfort matter.

Range is not the whole voice type

Timbre, passaggio, comfort, training, and repertoire all matter. Treat this page as a practical starting point.

Vocal range test FAQ

Answers about vocal range, voice type, safe testing, and result changes.






Need a single-note pitch check?

Use the pitch detector when you want a live note, Hz reading, cents meter, and pitch curve.