Convert musical cents to frequency in Hz. Calculate pitch differences, tuning offsets, and frequency ratios for music theory and instrument tuning.
The Cent to Hz Calculator converts musical cents, a logarithmic unit of pitch interval, into frequencies in Hertz. One cent is 1/100th of a semitone in equal temperament, making cents the standard precision unit for describing pitch differences in tuning, intonation, and microtonality.
This tool is essential for instrument tuners, audio engineers, and music theorists who need to understand the exact frequency difference between two pitches. Given a reference frequency such as A4 = 440 Hz and an offset in cents, the calculator computes the resulting frequency, the frequency ratio, and the absolute Hz difference.
In addition, you can convert between cent offsets and frequency ratios, compare different tuning standards such as A4 = 432 Hz, 440 Hz, or 442 Hz, and explore microtonal intervals. The calculator supports both positive and negative cent values for pitches above or below the reference, which is useful when you are checking intonation against a fixed tuning target.
Cents are the standard precision unit for pitch, but many musicians and engineers still need the real frequency change in Hertz when they tune, analyze intonation, or compare tuning references.
This calculator is useful because it bridges those two views directly. It shows how a cent offset translates into ratio and Hz difference at the chosen reference pitch, which is what matters when you are tuning an instrument, checking a recording, or comparing two reference standards.
f₂ = f₁ × 2^(cents/1200). Cents from ratio: cents = 1200 × log₂(f₂/f₁). One semitone = 100 cents, one octave = 1200 cents.
Result: 466.16 Hz
100 cents above A4 (440 Hz) is A#4/Bb4 at 466.16 Hz. The ratio is 2^(100/1200) ≈ 1.05946, the twelfth root of 2.
The cent system was defined by Alexander Ellis in the 1880s as a way to compare pitch intervals across different tuning systems. By making each semitone exactly 100 cents, the system provides a convenient, logarithmic scale where musical perception matches the numbers — doubling the cents doubles the perceived interval size.
The formula f₂ = f₁ × 2^(cents/1200) comes from the exponential nature of pitch perception. Because our ears perceive pitch logarithmically, equal additive steps in cents correspond to equal multiplicative steps in frequency.
Equal temperament (12-TET) is the dominant system in Western music, but it's a compromise. Pure intervals from the harmonic series differ slightly: a just major third is 386 cents vs. 400 in ET, a just perfect fifth is 702 vs. 700. These small differences are why some musicians prefer just intonation for certain repertoire.
Other systems like 19-TET, 31-TET, and 53-TET attempt to better approximate just intervals while maintaining equal spacing. The cent system is invaluable for comparing these systems objectively.
Cents are used daily by piano tuners (who stretch octaves by 2-3 cents in the extremes), guitar builders (who set intonation to within ±2 cents), and vocalists (who use cent-based feedback from tuning apps to improve pitch accuracy).
A cent is 1/100th of an equal-tempered semitone. There are 1200 cents in an octave. Cents provide a precise, logarithmic way to describe pitch intervals.
Hz differences vary by register — a semitone is ~26 Hz at A4 but ~52 Hz at A5. Cents are constant: 100 cents is always one semitone regardless of register, which makes them easier to compare across octaves and tuning systems.
The international standard is A4 = 440 Hz, adopted in 1955. Some orchestras tune to 442 or 443 Hz. Historical and alternative tuning uses 432 Hz.
A quarter tone is 50 cents, exactly half a semitone. Quarter tones are used in Arabic maqam music and contemporary microtonal compositions.
Most people cannot detect a 1-cent difference. The threshold for most trained musicians is 5-10 cents. Tuners typically show ±1 cent precision.
Equal temperament divides the octave into 12 equal semitones of 100 cents each. Just intonation intervals differ slightly — a perfect fifth is 702 cents vs. 700 in equal temperament.