Tempo tapper

Tap BPM and Tempo Counter

Tap the beat of a song or idea and Vocuno calculates the tempo from your timing. It filters out rough taps and shows a confidence score.

Instant tempo estimate

Every tap updates the BPM from the most recent timing intervals.

Outlier filtering

Rough taps are softened so one mistake does not ruin the tempo estimate.

No microphone needed

Works with clicks, finger taps, or keyboard/mouse input because it only measures time.

Tap BPM

Tap along with a beat to find BPM instantly.

Taps
0
Spread
--
Confidence
0%

Workflow

How to use Tap BPM

1

Play the song

Start the track or rhythm you want to measure.

2

Tap the pulse

Tap the main beat steadily for at least four beats.

3

Read the BPM

Use the rolling BPM and confidence score to decide when the tempo is stable.

Tap tempo vs audio BPM detection

Tap tempo is manual and works even when the audio is unavailable, too noisy, or rhythmically ambiguous. Audio BPM detection analyzes a file automatically. Producers often use both: tap first for a quick guess, then confirm with an audio detector.

How many taps do you need?

Four taps is enough for a rough estimate, but eight to ten steady taps gives a better average. If the confidence score is low, reset and tap again with a stronger sense of the downbeat.

Frequently Asked Questions

Yes. Tap along to the track and use the BPM estimate as a quick tempo reference.

You may be tapping half-time or double-time. Double or halve the result depending on the musical feel.

No. Tap BPM uses click timing only.

Accuracy depends on your taps. More steady taps produce a better estimate.

Use Tap BPM inside your Vocuno workflow

Keep quick pitch and tempo checks next to AI vocals, stem separation, voice conversion, and the Studio editor.

Open tap BPM