Perfect Pitch Test
Hear a note with no reference and name it. Find out whether you have perfect pitch.
How It Works
No reference note is given — that is what separates perfect pitch from relative pitch.
Why use the Perfect Pitch Test?
True Absolute Pitch
Notes are played with no reference tone, so the test screens for genuine perfect pitch, not relative pitch.
Instant Results
See whether you named each note correctly and get your final score the moment you finish.
Private and Free
The whole test runs in your browser. Nothing is recorded and nothing is shared.
Frequently Asked Questions
How does the perfect pitch test work?
A single musical note plays with no reference tone before it, and you tap the note name you think you heard. After 15 notes, your score shows how reliably you can identify pitches from memory alone, which is the hallmark of absolute pitch.
What is perfect pitch?
Perfect pitch, or absolute pitch, is the rare ability to name or reproduce a musical note without any reference. It is different from relative pitch, where you identify notes by comparing them to a known starting note. Relative pitch can be learned by almost anyone, while true absolute pitch is uncommon.
How rare is perfect pitch?
Estimates suggest only about 1 in 10,000 people have true perfect pitch. A high score here is a strong sign, but the best confirmation is consistent results across several attempts and different instruments.
Is it really free?
Yes. The perfect pitch test is completely free, requires no signup, and runs entirely in your browser.
