Metronome · Allegro

130 BPM Metronome

A free, precise online metronome locked to 130 BPM (Allegro). Tech-house, slower techno. Hit play below to start, or open the full metronome to add subdivisions, time signatures, and tap tempo.

130
BPM · Allegro
▶ Open in metronome

What does 130 BPM feel like?

Most modern dance music sits between 124 and 132 BPM. Allegro is the traditional Italian tempo marking that covers this range — it tells classical performers roughly how fast to play before any specific BPM is given.

How to use a 130 BPM metronome for practice

The most common use is locking your playing to a steady reference. Start by playing along with the click at 130 BPM until your timing feels solid. If a passage is giving you trouble, drop the metronome to about 75% of the target tempo (around 97 BPM), nail it cleanly, then bring it back up in small increments.

For singers and instrumentalists working on phrasing, set the metronome to 130 BPM and clap or count out the beats while singing or playing the melody freely on top — this trains your sense of where the beat sits without forcing every note onto a click.

FAQs

What music is at 130 BPM?

Most modern dance music sits between 124 and 132 BPM.

Is 130 BPM fast or slow?

130 BPM corresponds to the Italian tempo marking Allegro. Tech-house, slower techno.

How accurate is this metronome?

The click is scheduled using the Web Audio API's sample-accurate clock with a 25 ms lookahead — the same approach used by professional digital audio workstations. Drift is typically under 1 ms per minute.

Related on MusoKit

Full metronomeTime signatures, subdivisions, tap tempo, custom click sounds. BPM to millisecondsConvert 130 BPM into delay and LFO times for your DAW. Drum machineBuild a beat at 130 BPM with classic 808/909/acoustic kits.