Absolute Pitch β€” AP Test

Do You Have Perfect Pitch?

Find out in 10 minutes. No music theory required. Just headphones and honest ears.

What you will learn

What the AP Test measures

Absolute pitch is the ability to identify a note without any external reference. This test maps where you sit on the spectrum.

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Note identification

Can you name a note played in isolation? The test presents pure tones and asks you to identify them.

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Your AP score

You receive a score from 0 to 100, benchmarked against thousands of other musicians.

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Training plan

Based on your score, you get a personalised daily plan targeting your weakest note recognition gaps.

How it works

How the test works

01

Put on your headphones

Audio quality matters. Use headphones or studio monitors for accurate results.

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02

Identify 20 notes

Each note plays once. No replays. Answer quickly. The test adapts to your accuracy.

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03

Get your AP profile

See your score, your strongest and weakest notes, and your personalised training path.

Also try

Complete your pitch profile

Each dimension of pitch perception reinforces the others.

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Relative Pitch

Measure intervals between two notes.

Try it β†’
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Pitch Memory

Hold a note in your head over time.

Try it β†’
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Chord Recognition

Identify chord types by ear.

Try it β†’
FAQ

Common questions

Research suggests absolute pitch is much easier to develop in early childhood. That said, many adult musicians develop a strong working approximation through consistent ear training.
Absolute pitch is naming a note in isolation. Relative pitch is hearing the relationship between two notes. Both are trainable and both matter.
No. The test uses audio only. You choose from note names presented on screen. No prior reading ability is required.

Ready to test your absolute pitch?

Discover your true musical potential.

Test my perfect pitch β†’