Whether you’re an operatic diva or a casual karaoke enthusiast, knowing your vocal range can help you train your voice safely and choose songs that make you sound great. You can easily figure out your vocal range and identify to which of the seven main voice types—soprano, mezzo-soprano, alto, countertenor, tenor, baritone, or bass—you belong. We spoke with Amy Chapman, MA, CCC-SLP, a vocal therapist and singing voice specialist, about how to properly identify your comfortable and extended vocal ranges. We’ll also show you how to use that range to find your voice type and determine how many octaves you have.
How do you find your vocal range?
- Warm up your voice, then sing a comfortable middle pitch and match it on the piano. Try middle C (C4) for women or C3 for men.
- Sing and play downward note by note and stop when you can’t sustain a pitch with a full sound anymore. This is your lowest note.
- Sing and play upward note by note to find your highest chest voice note, then keep going to find your highest head voice (falsetto) note.
Steps
Finding Your Highest & Lowest Notes
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First, warm up your voice for a few minutes. Warming up helps you “wake up” your vocal cords, focus on your breathing, and improve the flexibility of your voice (making it easier to hit the extreme low and high notes of your range). No need for flashy technical exercises—try some of these simple warmups: [1] X Research source
Sighs: Inhale with your mouth closed, then “sigh” through your nose, allowing your vocal cords to make a soft “yawning” sound.
Lip buzzing: Inhale through your mouth, then exhale with your lips held loosely together so they “flap” in the air stream (like you’re mimicking a motorcycle sound).
Descending mini-scales: Start in your head (falsetto) voice and sing 5-note scales going downward on a relaxed, open syllable like “ah” or “oo.” Repeat several times, starting on a lower pitch each time.
Body stretches: If it’s first thing in the morning, stretch your neck, back, and shoulders to get physically comfortable. This helps you breathe deeply and support your singing voice. -
Sing and play an easy note in the middle of your range on a keyboard. This will be your starting point for exploring your range. For many women, playing middle C (C4) is a good place to start. For men, try an octave lower on C3. Sing on an open, comfortable syllable like “ah” or “oo.”
On a full-size (88 key) keyboard, middle C is the 24th white key from the left (the 4th C from the left).
If you don’t have access to a piano or keyboard, download a piano app like Virtual Piano + instead.Advertisement -
Sing down, note by note, until you can’t sustain the pitch comfortably. Stop on the lowest note you can sustain in your normal, comfortable voice for about 3 seconds without croaking or cracking. This is the lowest note of your chest voice (your normal or “modal” voice).
Vocal therapist Amy Chapman says, “You should not have to “breathe” the note. Its tone quality should match the rest of your chest voice and not have a breathy or scratchy sound.” [2] X Expert Source Amy Chapman, MA
Vocal Coach Expert Interview. 18 October 2019.
Once you know how low your voice reaches comfortably, try to go a bit lower. Amy Chapman says, “Breathy notes you can sustain for 3 seconds count for this “extended” range, but croaky notes that you cannot hold do not.” [3] X Expert Source Amy Chapman, MA
Vocal Coach Expert Interview. 18 October 2019. For some singers, their lowest normal and breathy notes may coincide. For others, they might not. -
Record your lowest comfortable note and lowest “breathy” note. Write down the letter name of the note (A, B, C, D, E, F, or G) followed by a number that matches which octave the note is in. [4] X Research source
For example, if your lowest note is the second-to-last E on the keyboard (the second E from the left), write down E 2 because it’s in the second octave of the piano.
Remember that the first 2 white keys on the left (A and B) are in octave 0. Octave 1 starts at the first C (C1, or the 3rd white key from the left). -
Repeat this process going upward to find your highest notes. Go back to your starting pitch and sing upward with the keyboard. Stop at the highest note you can sing in your chest voice for 3 seconds, but “do not let yourself go into falsetto for this exercise,” says vocal therapist Amy Chapman. [5] X Expert Source Amy Chapman, MA
Vocal Coach Expert Interview. 18 October 2019. If you hear a break or new breathiness in your voice, then you’ve passed into your falsetto range.
Once you’ve found your highest note in chest voice, relax your vocal cords and push yourself higher. Amy Chapman says, “Use your breathier, flute-like falsetto voice to find the highest notes you can reach without straining or cracking.” [6] X Expert Source Amy Chapman, MA
Vocal Coach Expert Interview. 18 October 2019.
Write down both your highest modal and falsetto notes. -
Write down your 2 lowest and 2 highest notes in ascending order. Put parentheses around the lowest “breathy” note and your highest falsetto note, and a dash between the middle two notes representing your chest voice.
This notation expresses your full vocal range—your extremes low and high, plus your “normal” comfortable range. For example, your full range might look like (D 2 )G 2 –F 4 (B 4 ).
Expert Q&A
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QuestionHow do you determine your vocal range?Amy Chapman MA, CCC-SLP is a Vocal Therapist and Singing Voice Specialist. Amy is a licensed and board-certified speech & language pathologist who has dedicated her career to helping professionals improve and optimize their voice. Amy has lectured on voice optimization, speech, vocal health, and voice rehabilitation at universities across California, including UCLA, USC, Chapman University, Cal Poly Pomona, CSUF, CSULA. Amy is trained in Lee Silverman Voice Therapy, Estill, LMRVT, and is a part of the American Speech and Hearing Association.Vocal range is essentially dropping your voice as low as it can go. So do some warm up, and then hum all the way down or let your voice drop all the way down to the lowest place. And then go all the way up. Wherever you can hold a note for three seconds, I would call that your vocal range.
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QuestionIs it necessary to use a piano? I don't have any keyboard or piano in my home.Community AnswerAnother way to find the notes that a piano can provide is to find a piano app, such as the Pitch Pipe app, for your smartphone, iPad, or other relevant device. This is easy to use and the sound will still be effective.
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QuestionI'm female and my range is (E3)G3-D5(F5). What is my voice classification?Rosie DohertyCommunity AnswerI would say a lyric Contralto since you can go a little lower than most Contralto can and can hit the top of your range at F5. Most Conaltos can sing that note. Most go to E5 so i say in middle for Contralto.
Video
Tips
- If you’re having trouble identifying your voice type, use your tessitura since those are the notes you can sing most easily.Thanks
- If your voice falls between types, find what is most comfortable to sing. If that doesn't work, the range your voice is strongest may be the answer.Thanks
- While vocal range is probably the most important part of voice types, other aspects of your voice like timbre and where your head and chest voice sit are taken into account.Thanks
References
- ↑ https://nafme.org/blog/vocal-health-how-choral-directors-can-help-students/
- ↑ Amy Chapman, MA. Vocal Coach. Expert Interview. 18 October 2019.
- ↑ Amy Chapman, MA. Vocal Coach. Expert Interview. 18 October 2019.
- ↑ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s_B8MFz72fI
- ↑ Amy Chapman, MA. Vocal Coach. Expert Interview. 18 October 2019.
- ↑ Amy Chapman, MA. Vocal Coach. Expert Interview. 18 October 2019.
- ↑ https://www.singwise.com/articles/understanding-vocal-range-vocal-registers-and-voice-type-a-glossary-of-vocal-terms
- ↑ https://web.library.yale.edu/cataloging/music/vocal-ranges
- ↑ https://vocalist.org.uk/voice-registers
About This Article
To find your vocal range, start by singing a note on a consistent vowel sound, like "ah," "ee," or "oo," and working your way down the scale so you're singing lower and lower notes. Then, write down the lowest note you can sing without your voice cracking or croaking. Next, repeat the same process, but this time sing as high as you can, including the highest note you can sing in falsetto. Finally, use the lowest and highest notes you can sing to determine your vocal range. To learn how to classify your range once you know what notes you can comfortably sing, scroll down!
Reader Success Stories
- "It helps me understand what ranges, classifications and how to find my voice classification is. I love to sing but I never knew these things until I read this. Thanks and now that I'm aware of these things, I can practice more to make my voice sound better." ..." more