Online Metronome

Practice with a steady, accurate beat right in your browser. Set your BPM, choose a time signature, pick a click sound, and build timing that feels natural in real playing.

Whether you're working on guitar, piano, drums, vocals, strings, or production ideas, this free online metronome helps you stay locked in without breaking your flow.

BPM
120
Allegro

Press Spacebar to start/stop

Time Signature

Click Sound

Explore more AI Music Tools

PDF to Score

Convert PDF/image scores into MusicXML.

Stem Splitter

Split songs into stems.

Tap Tempo BPM Counter

Tap along to any song to measure its BPM.

Online Metronome

Set any tempo and practice with a precise click track.

BPM Finder

Upload a song and detect its BPM automatically.

Key Finder

Detect the musical key and scale of any song.

Song Analyzer

Get BPM and key analysis in one upload.

Audio Speed & Pitch Changer

Change tempo and pitch independently, download the result.

Chord Finder

Detect the chord progression of any song.

Text to Sample

Generate one-shot/loop samples from text prompt.

Free Online Metronome for Accurate Rhythm Practice

Use this free online metronome to tighten your timing before you record, write, or arrange. Slow down difficult passages, practice vocal phrasing, lock in guitar or piano parts, and build speed without losing control.

When the rhythm feels right, you can bring the same tempo into ACE Studio and shape AI Vocals , harmonies, or AI instrument parts around a steady musical grid.

What is a Metronome?

A metronome gives you a steady beat at a chosen tempo, measured in BPM. It helps musicians hear time clearly, practice with consistency, and develop a stronger internal rhythm.

For producers, tempo is also the foundation of the session. A clear BPM keeps MIDI notes, vocal phrasing, pitch movement, delays, edits, and arrangement changes aligned.

How to Use This Online Metronome

1

Set your desired tempo using the slider, +/- buttons, or preset buttons

2

Choose your time signature (4/4 is most common for pop, rock, and electronic music)

3

Click Play or press Spacebar to start the metronome

4

Watch the visual beat indicator to follow along

5

Adjust the volume and click sound to your preference

BPM and Tempo Guide

Tempo shapes the feel of your performance.

  • 40–76 BPM: Slow practice, technique work, difficult passages
  • 77–120 BPM: Common song tempos, scales, daily practice
  • 121+ BPM: Speed drills, advanced exercises, performance prep

Don't rush the tempo. A clean take at a slower BPM is more useful than a fast take that loses the pocket.

Common Time Signatures

Choose the feel that matches your music:

  • 4/4: The most common pulse in pop, rock, hip-hop, electronic music, and many other styles
  • 3/4: A three-beat feel often heard in waltzes and traditional pieces
  • 6/8: A flowing rhythm used in folk, ballads, and contemporary songwriting

Switching between time signatures is a simple way to sharpen your rhythmic awareness.

Why Practice with a Metronome?

A metronome helps you hear where your timing moves. You can use it to tighten your attacks, smooth out transitions, and keep your performance steady from the first beat to the last.

It's useful for solo practice, band rehearsal, vocal training, and studio work – anywhere timing affects the feel of the music.

ACE Studio gives you tools to shape the performance after the rhythm is set. You decide the melody, timing, lyrics, phrasing, and emotion. ACE Studio helps you refine vocals and instruments around that musical intent.

From Metronome Practice to ACE Studio Production

A steady tempo is not just for practice. It is the starting point for a cleaner production workflow.

Once you know the BPM, you can bring your idea into ACE Studio and keep every part connected to the same pulse. Write a vocal melody with MIDI and lyrics, shape the performance with the AI Singing Voice Generator , or build harmonies that stay locked to your arrangement.

Need a starting point? Use Inspire Me to prompt for musical ideas inside ACE Studio. Describe the mood, genre, tempo, or direction you have in mind, then use the generated material as a spark for your own writing. You stay in control of what to keep, change, arrange, or rebuild.

Working with an existing song? Use Stem Splitter to separate vocals, drums, bass, and instruments, then practice or rebuild parts around the original groove.

Exploring vocal ideas? Use the AI Voice Changer to test different vocal colors while keeping the phrasing and timing of the original performance.

Writing instrument parts? Use AI Instruments to turn MIDI into expressive performances without losing control of rhythm, articulation, or arrangement.

The metronome gives you the pulse. ACE Studio gives you a place to shape that pulse into a finished musical idea.

Create in Time with ACE Studio

Your best ideas need more than a click. They need timing, phrasing, tone, and control.

ACE Studio helps you shape vocals, instruments, harmonies, and arrangements with precise creative control. You guide the melody, timing, phrasing, and expression – ACE Studio gives you flexible tools to refine the performance.

Try ACE Studio Free →

FAQ

What BPM should beginners practice at?

Most beginners start around 60–80 BPM. The right tempo is the one where you can play accurately and stay relaxed.

Is this online metronome free?

Yes. You can use it directly in your browser.

Can I use a metronome for singing?

Yes. Singers use metronomes to improve phrasing, breath placement, rhythm, and timing.

Which instruments benefit from a metronome?

Nearly all of them – guitar, piano, drums, bass, violin, cello, brass, woodwinds, vocals, and production workflows.

Can I use this metronome before creating AI vocals?

Yes. Set your BPM here first, then use the same tempo when writing MIDI and lyrics in ACE Studio's AI Singing Voice Generator. A steady tempo helps your vocal phrasing, note timing, and arrangement feel more controlled.

Can I practice with a song and then produce with ACE Studio?

Yes. Use BPM Finder to detect the tempo, practice with the metronome, then use Stem Splitter if you want to separate the song into vocals, drums, bass, or instrumental layers for production work.
Copyright © 2026 Timedomain Inc.
Terms of Use
Privacy Policy