Vocal Range Test
What is my vocal range? Sing your lowest note, then your highest — get your range, your span in octaves, and your voice type, from bass to soprano. Free, in your browser, nothing recorded.
Two steps: sing your lowest comfortable note, then your highest. Your voice is analyzed on your device and never recorded.
How to Find Your Vocal Range
Two notes, two minutes — warm up first for your real numbers.
Sing Your Lowest Note
Allow the mic, then slide down to your deepest comfortable note and hold it. The test keeps your lowest stable note.
Sing Your Highest Note
Lock in the low, then slide up to your highest clear note — head voice counts if you want your full range.
Read Your Result
You get your range (like G2–E5), the span in octaves, your closest voice type, and bars comparing you to all six types.
A Voice Type Test You Can Trust
Real pitch detection, honest results, and no audience.
Your Range in Two Notes
Sing your lowest comfortable note, then your highest clear one — the test names both, measures the distance, and shows your full range.
Voice Type Included
Your range is matched against the six classical voice types — bass to soprano — so you get 'baritone', not just two note names.
See Where You Sit
Comparison bars draw your range against every voice type on one scale, so you can see exactly how you overlap with each.
Squeaks Don't Count
Only notes you hold steadily for a moment are counted, so a crack, a cough, or background noise can't fake your record low or high.
Nothing Is Recorded
Your voice is analyzed on your own device and discarded frame by frame. Test your embarrassing top note freely — no audio ever leaves the page.
Works on Mobile
Runs in the browser on iOS, Android, Chrome, Firefox, Safari, and Edge — test your range anywhere your phone goes.
Test Your Top Note With Nobody Listening
Finding your true highest note means being willing to crack. Your voice is analyzed on your own device, frame by frame, and discarded — no audio is recorded, stored, or uploaded, and the mic switches off the moment the test ends.
No Recording
Frames are analyzed and discarded
No Upload
The analysis runs in your browser
You're in Control
Stop ends mic access instantly
Why Singers Test Their Range
Two note names answer a surprising number of questions.
Pick Songs That Fit
Know your limits before you commit to a song two notes out of reach
Choose the Right Key
Shift a song's key to sit comfortably inside your range
Join a Choir
Walk in knowing whether you're a tenor, alto, or baritone
Track Your Progress
Retest monthly and watch your range grow with practice
Settle the Argument
Prove once and for all who in the house sings higher
Warm-Up Check
See how much range a good warm-up actually adds
What Your Range Actually Tells You
Every singer eventually asks two questions: what is my vocal range, and what voice type am I? The answers are just two note names — your lowest and your highest — but they decide which songs fit you, which key to ask for, and which section you join in a choir. This test measures both notes with real pitch detection and gives you the classical label to go with them.
From two notes to a voice type
The six classical voice types are really just typical comfortable ranges: bass around E2–E4, then baritone, tenor, contralto, and mezzo-soprano, up to soprano around C4–C6. The test compares your measured range against all six and names the closest — and shows the comparison bars, because most real voices straddle two categories. A baritone who has worked on his top end overlaps well into tenor territory; the label is a starting point, not a verdict.
Getting your true numbers
Warm up first — a cold voice tests a few semitones short at both ends. Go for comfortable and clear, not extreme: the note should be one you could actually sing in a song, held steady rather than squeaked. That’s also how the test itself works — only notes you hold for a moment are counted, so cracks and coughs can’t set your record. Decide up front whether falsetto counts for you: include it for your absolute range, leave it out for a more honest voice-type answer.
Range grows — retest it
An untrained voice usually spans about one and a half to two octaves; with regular practice, most singers add real semitones at the top within months. Because this test takes two minutes and nothing is recorded, it works as a progress tracker: retest at the start of each month and write the numbers down. Watching E5 become F5 is more motivating than any practice app streak.
Put your range to work
Once you know your range, the rest of the toolkit picks up: watch your pitch live while you practice with the vocal pitch monitor, check any single note with the note identifier, move a backing track into your key with the pitch changer, and record the result with the voice recorder.
Know Your Range? Now Record In It
The full Notevibes Online Audio Editor records your voice, shifts songs into your key, tunes vocals, and exports to MP3 or WAV — all in your browser.
Free to try · No credit card required
Related Audio Tools
More free AI audio tools from Notevibes — same engine, no sign-up.
Pitch Matching Game
Hear a note, sing it back — the mic grades you in cents.
Vocal Pitch Monitor
Watch your voice draw a live pitch line across a note grid.
Perfect Pitch Test
Hear a note with no reference — can you name it?
Ear Training
Interval recognition game — name the distance between notes.
Pitch Detector
Read the live pitch of any sound — Hz, note, and cents.
Voice Recorder
Record audio from your microphone in the browser.
Vocal Range Test FAQ
How does the vocal range test work?
Two steps. First, slide down and hold your lowest comfortable note — the test tracks the deepest stable note it hears. Then slide up and hold your highest clear note. Your range is the distance between the two, shown with both note names, the span in octaves, and your closest classical voice type.
What are the voice types?
The six classical categories: bass, baritone, and tenor for lower voices; contralto, mezzo-soprano, and soprano for higher ones. Each covers a typical comfortable range — bass roughly E2–E4, soprano roughly C4–C6. The test matches your measured range to the closest one, and many voices sit between two types.
Does falsetto count?
It's your call. Classical voice typing is usually based on your full (chest and head) voice, but if you want your absolute range, sing your falsetto top too — the test measures whatever you give it. For a voice-type answer, stick to notes you could sing in a song.
What's a normal vocal range?
Most untrained voices span about 1.5 to 2 octaves comfortably; trained singers often reach 2.5 to 3. Range also isn't everything — tone and control across the range you have matter more than the size of it.
Why doesn't my lowest note register?
Very low notes are quiet and airy, which makes them hard for a phone mic to pick up. Get closer to the microphone, give the note real voice rather than whispering it, and hold it steady for a second — only stable notes count.
Is my voice recorded or uploaded?
No. The microphone signal is analyzed on your own device and discarded frame by frame — nothing is recorded, stored, or sent anywhere, and the mic switches off when you finish or press Stop.
Is it free?
Completely free — no account, no upload, no limits. Retest as often as you like; it runs entirely in your browser.