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Voice Type Test: Find Your Range-Soprano, Alto, Tenor or Bass

Quick, free voice type quiz with instant results and range tips.

Editorial: Review CompletedCreated By: Zetty SofinaUpdated Aug 23, 2025
2-5mins
Profiles
Paper art illustration promoting a free voice type test to discover vocal range on a teal background.

This voice type test helps you map your vocal range and see whether you lean soprano, alto, tenor, or bass. Get instant results plus simple tips for warming up and choosing keys. If you want a broader check, try our what singer am i quiz, explore the soprano or alto quiz for female parts, or see how you're doing with am i a good singer.

Which skyline best matches where your comfortable singing feels most at home?
Sunlit mountaintops
Warm downtown terraces
Bright high-rise midlevels
Shaded valley floors
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Your ideal melody shape across a phrase is
A quick, sparkling ascent
A smooth, glowing arc
A clear, forward climb then glide
A grounded descent with resonance
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Pick the ensemble role you naturally take
Shimmering lead above the texture
Steady inner foundation
Bright carrier of the tune
Anchor at the bottom
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The sensation you chase when singing is
Featherlight ease at the top
Velvet warmth in the middle
Ring and ping forward
Chesty rumble below
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When you hum softly, it tends to settle
High and sparkly
Centered and mellow
Bright and focused
Low and resonant
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Choose a weather pattern that mirrors your vocal feel
Clear crisp morning sky
Amber dusk warmth
Bright noon with a breeze
Deep, calm midnight air
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Your favorite harmony to sing is typically
The high sparkle line
The inner cushion
The bright lead just above center
The grounding bass pedal
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If your voice were an instrument
Piccolo or glockenspiel
Viola or clarinet
Trumpet or tenor sax
Tuba or contrabass
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In a rehearsal, you gravitate toward exercises that feel
Agile and buoyant up high
Centered and color-rich
Forward and ringing
Grounded and expansive
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Pick a metaphor for your resonance
Sunlight on glass
Embers in a hearth
Beacon through mist
Cave cathedral echo
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Your ideal chorus spot is
Top row, floating above
Middle rows, blending warmly
Upper-middle, cutting through
Bottom row, holding it down
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Choose your comfort lyric
We rise
We glow
We shine
We ground
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Which dynamic feels most natural to start a phrase
Light and airy, then bloom
Warm and present, steady
Clear and forward from the get-go
Quiet depth growing slowly
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If a melody jumps unexpectedly, your instinct is to
Catch it high with ease
Wrap it in warmth midrange
Aim it with bright focus
Settle it into low resonance
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Pick a landscape for your sound
Snowy peak under sun
Autumn forest path
Open hillside at noon
Grand canyon at dusk
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Your breath support feels most effective when it
Floats and releases upward
Settles and sustains warmly
Channels forward like a beam
Pressurizes depth without force
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Which rehearsal feedback makes you nod
Let it stay light and free
Keep the color consistent
Focus the ring, not the push
Trust the floor of your sound
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Favorite lyrical mood to deliver
Sparkling joy
Intimate warmth
Earnest clarity
Gravitas and calm
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On a morning with no warmup, your speaking voice sits
Surprisingly high and bright
Comfortably mid and smooth
A bit higher than average, clear
Low and full
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Climbing a scale feels best when the top note is
A sparkling landing
A warm plateau
A bright forward goal
A deep echo to return to
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The lowest standard choral part is soprano.
True
False
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Tenors often carry melodies in many choral styles.
True
False
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Bass voices are incapable of singing above middle C.
True
False
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Altos typically feel comfortable sustaining in the middle register.
True
False
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The term head voice refers exclusively to sopranos.
True
False
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A focused, ringing placement helps projection without strain.
True
False
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Only basses provide harmonic grounding in ensembles.
True
False
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A lighter onset can make high phrases feel easier.
True
False
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Tenor range always ends where alto range begins, with no overlap.
True
False
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Sustaining warmth and color is central to many alto lines.
True
False
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Profiles

  1. Sky-High Soprano -

    You effortlessly soar into higher registers, captivating listeners with bright, agile tones. Your range typically spans C4 to C6, making you a standout in any soprano role. Quick tip: Warm up with ascending scales in your upper register and revisit this vocal type test to chart your progress.

  2. Soulful Alto -

    Your rich, warm lower register (F3 to F5) adds depth and harmony to every song. As an alto, you anchor choral textures and deliver a velvety timbre. Wondering what voice type am I? Practice chest-voice exercises daily and let this voice type test guide your growth.

  3. Tenor Trailblazer -

    With a bright, ringing timbre and a comfortable B2 to B4 range, you're built for leading melodies. Curious what type of voice do I have? Embrace your tenor spark by refining head-to-chest mix with gentle scales and revisit our free voice type test to track your growth.

  4. Baritone Bridge -

    Straddling tenor and bass, your versatile A2 to A4 range makes you the ensemble's glue. If you're still asking what voice part am I, focus on blending chest and head voice with gentle sirens to unlock seamless transitions.

  5. Bass Resonator -

    Your deep, resonant tones (E2 to E4) provide a powerful foundation in any arrangement. Proud to know your fach? Boost your breath control with sustained low-note drills and revisit this free vocal type test to celebrate your depth.

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