TuneUniversal

Online metronome with BPM and subdivisions

Practice with a full online metronome featuring precise BPM control, subdivisions, accents, Tap Tempo and progressive speed cycles.

BPM

Bars: 0/4

Output

On iPhone, Silent Mode can block browser audio: turn Silent Mode off or use headphones. The beat flash stays active.

Beat1/4 · 4/4

Preset memories

No saved presets

At a glance

The key details to understand this tool at a glance.

Tempo

Precise BPM + Tap Tempo

Rhythm

Accents and subdivisions

Routine

Practice cycle to target BPM

How it works

  1. Set the BPM.
  2. Choose a meter.
  3. Start the pulse and follow the accented first beat.

Related guides

A better practice method

Start slow, accent the first beat and only raise the BPM after several clean cycles.

Speed-building routine

Use the practice cycle to move from a start BPM to a target BPM in small steps after a chosen number of bars or seconds.

Quick answers

Short answers to the most common first-step questions.

What BPM should beginners start with?

Start at the fastest tempo where you can still play cleanly and relaxed, then raise it in small steps.

Why use subdivisions?

Subdivisions make the inner pulse clearer and help a lot with timing, groove and consistency.

Explore the next step

Use these links to move between the tool, practical guides and the matching tuning hub.

Related guides

Related searches

Internal pages that naturally match the next step after this tool.

Related questions

Short follow-up questions to keep practice moving.

Which subdivision should you practice first?

For a stable start, begin with straight eighth notes and move to triplets or sixteenths later.

Metronome subdivisions guide

Should you find the BPM of the song first?

You can estimate the song tempo with Tap BPM and then practice it right away with the metronome.

Tap BPM counter

FAQ

Can I tap tempo?

Yes, use the tap control to estimate a tempo.

Which meters are available?

2/4, 3/4, 4/4 and 6/8.

What BPM should I practice at?

Start at the fastest tempo where you can still play cleanly and relaxed, then increase gradually.

Why use subdivisions?

Subdivisions help you hear the rhythm inside each beat, not only the main click.