Tuplet Ratio Calculator | Triplet & Tuplet Timing

Tuplet Ratio Calculator

Work out the exact duration of any tuplet – triplets, quintuplets, septuplets and beyond. Get per-note milliseconds, full group length, MIDI ticks and the effective note rate for any ratio, base note value and tempo

🎵 Quick Presets
🎛 Tuplet Inputs
Duration Per Tuplet Note
milliseconds
Tuplet Group Total
milliseconds
Ticks Per Tuplet Note
ticks
Effective Tuplet Rate
notes / second

Full Calculation Breakdown

Tuplet
Ratio (simplified)
Base note duration
Per-note formula
Per tuplet note
Group total = M × base
Ticks per note
Feels like
📐 Current Tuplet Spec
3:2
Ratio N:M
166.7
ms / Note
500
ms / Group
160
Ticks / Note
🎼 Common Tuplets Reference
Tuplet NameRatio (N:M)MeaningCommonly Used In
Duplet2:32 in space of 3Compound meters (6/8, 9/8)
Triplet3:23 in space of 2Swing, shuffle, fills
Quadruplet4:34 in space of 3Compound meters
Quintuplet5:45 in space of 4Prog, fusion, fills
Sextuplet6:46 in space of 4Fast runs, double kick
Septuplet7:47 in space of 4Prog metal, modern jazz
Nonuplet9:89 in space of 8Dense ornamental runs
Base Note Duration at Common BPMs (ms)
BPMQuarterEighthSixteenth
80750 ms375 ms187.5 ms
90666.7 ms333.3 ms166.7 ms
100600 ms300 ms150 ms
120500 ms250 ms125 ms
140428.6 ms214.3 ms107.1 ms
160375 ms187.5 ms93.75 ms
📊 Tuplet Note Length at 120 BPM (Eighth Base)
TupletRatioPer Note (ms)Group Total (ms)
Triplet3:2166.7 ms500 ms
Quintuplet5:4200 ms1000 ms
Sextuplet6:4166.7 ms1000 ms
Septuplet7:4142.9 ms1000 ms
Nonuplet9:8222.2 ms2000 ms
📏 Tuplet Spec Grid
TupletNotes (N)In Space Of (M)Duration Factor M/N
Triplet320.6667
Quintuplet540.8000
Sextuplet640.6667
Septuplet740.5714
Nonuplet980.8889
💡 Pro Tips
A tuplet fills the space of M normal notes: A triplet (3:2) crams 3 notes into the time normally taken by 2 of the same value, so the whole group still lasts exactly as long as 2 base notes – the count changes, not the total length.
Each tuplet note lasts base × M/N: Take the normal base-note duration and multiply by M/N. An eighth-note triplet at 120 BPM is 250 ms × (2/3) = 166.7 ms per note, and 3 of those equal one 500 ms group.

By now most musicians has heard of and felt what a triplet is, and they will know what I mean by a bouncy, swung subdivision that splits even eighth notes in half. Yet ask them to describe, with millisecond accuracy, the exact millisecond difference between a quintuplet and a septuplet at one hundred twenty beats per minute, and they will frequent freeze up. This isn’t because it’s not musical; its because it’s precise.

Your ears dictate the feel when playing a complex fill on a live instrument, or programming drums into a digital audio workstation, yet the grid dictates reality. Enter the number of beats per minute, the base note value, and the tuplet ratio to get hard time values using the tool above. This translates from an abstract idea of rhythm to actual time. Your brain thinks about rhythm in terms of duration, not simply relative spacing between notes. This translation are essential.

How to Calculate Tuplet Time Accurately

The calculator also gives you the number of midi ticks (if that’s what you’re dealing with), the total time of the tuplet, and the actual duration of each note in milliseconds. The rest of the settings is based off the tempo, base note value, and ratio you enter. So you’ll notice that a sixteenth note triplet sounds different than a triplet on a whole note, even though they are played in time. You’ll be able to switch through different subdivisions here to make sure you’re measuring the correct slice of time.

It’s also a small detail that trips people up as sometimes people wants an eighth note as their base note value instead of a quarter note. In this case, you’ll be out by a factor of two which is enough to break all the math. For producers, this PPQN setting is key too. Older standards was ninety-six ticks per quarter note, but newer DAWs typically has nine hundred sixty or above ticks per quarter note. This prevents subtle drift errors when you copy timing information from one piece of software to another with different resolutions. Those errors can kill a nice tight groove.

Time compression techniques is what tuplets are really all about. They simply pack more notes than there should of been into the same amount of time. By creating an element that disrupts your internal metronome, a quintuplet places five notes instead of four into available space. That disruption is the whole point of fusion jazz or progressive metal, and it provide forward motion and tension to drive energy along. But if you’re too rigid about it then it can become enemy of groove as opposed to precision.

The calculator’s output give you perfect mathematical equality between each note in the tuplet. This means that in theory, all five notes of a quintuplet is equal in length. In practice, this can sound robotic. Great musicians will often add micro-timing variations so the pattern breathes, as well as accenting certain beats within the tuplet. You have to add the flesh and blood. It doesn’t tell you which ones to punch forward or pull back for stylistic effect; it only tells where the notes land on the grid.

For rapid sanity checking I’d refer to reference tables found on the page. These show how time is split up with a standard triplet compared to more unusual ones like nonuplets. You can see how small those subdivisions are at higher tempos when they’re placed next to each other. At one hundred and sixtieth BPM a septuplet travels along quick enough that even very small imperfections stands out as glaring errors. Knowing your millisecond targets makes it easy to configure your recording software’s quantization settings correctly.

Playing tuplets is a question of combining your timing skills with a grasp of mathematics. Use the ruler (the calculator above) to measure yourself against, but how do you choose to sit in the middle of the line, or dance around it to create an effect? With the confidence that comes from knowing precisely how long each note lasts, you can break the rule with intent and precision instead of guesswork as to where the beat lands. You will know exactly how long to give each note.

Tuplet Ratio Calculator | Triplet & Tuplet Timing

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