Calculate musical intervals between two notes. Find semitone distance, interval name, frequency ratio, and cent value for any pair of pitches.
The Music Interval Calculator identifies the musical interval between any two notes. Enter two pitches and instantly see the interval name (perfect fifth, major third, etc.), the number of semitones, the frequency ratio, and the cent value. This is an essential tool for music theory students, composers, and anyone analyzing melodies or chord structures. It helps connect note names to the interval qualities and ratios musicians actually use in analysis and tuning.
Intervals are the building blocks of melody and harmony. Every chord is defined by the intervals between its notes, every scale by its sequence of intervals, and every melody by the intervals between successive notes. Understanding intervals is the single most important skill in music theory.
The calculator handles all standard intervals from unison through compound intervals beyond the octave. It shows both the simple and compound interval names, the quality (perfect, major, minor, augmented, diminished), and compares equal temperament to just intonation ratios.
Quickly identifying intervals is useful for theory, ear training, composition, chord analysis, and tuning comparisons.
This calculator helps because it shows the interval name, semitone count, ratio, and cent value together. That makes it more informative than a simple note-distance lookup and easier to use when comparing intervals across musical contexts.
Semitones = MIDI_note₂ - MIDI_note₁. Interval name derived from semitone count. Frequency ratio = 2^(semitones/12). Cents = semitones × 100.
Result: Perfect Fifth (7 semitones, ratio 1.498, 700 cents)
C4 to G4 is a perfect fifth — 7 semitones apart. In equal temperament, the ratio is 2^(7/12) ≈ 1.498. In just intonation, a pure fifth is 3:2 = 1.500 (702 cents).
Musical intervals are classified by two properties: size (number) and quality. The number tells you the staff distance (second, third, fourth, etc.), while the quality specifies the exact semitone count. Seconds, thirds, sixths, and sevenths can be major or minor. Unisons, fourths, fifths, and octaves are perfect, augmented, or diminished.
This system was developed over centuries of Western music theory and provides a complete vocabulary for describing pitch relationships. Every musical concept — scales, chords, voice leading, counterpoint — is built on intervals.
Psychoacoustic research shows that consonance correlates with the simplicity of the frequency ratio. The octave (2:1) is maximally consonant. The perfect fifth (3:2) is next. Major and minor thirds (5:4 and 6:5) are moderately consonant. Seconds and sevenths are dissonant, creating tension that resolves to consonant intervals.
This tension-resolution dynamic is the engine of Western harmony. Composers manipulate consonance and dissonance to create emotional arcs, suspense, and release.
In ear training, students learn to recognize intervals by associating each with a familiar melody. Perfect fourths sound like "Here Comes the Bride," perfect fifths like the Star Wars theme, and major sixths like "My Bonnie Lies Over the Ocean." Building this mental library transforms abstract theory into intuitive musical skill.
An interval is the pitch distance between two notes. It's described by a number (second, third, fourth...) and quality (major, minor, perfect, augmented, diminished).
Perfect intervals (unison, fourth, fifth, octave) have simple frequency ratios (1:1, 4:3, 3:2, 2:1) and sound very consonant. They don't have major/minor variants.
Major intervals are one semitone larger than their minor counterparts. C-E is a major third (4 semitones); C-Eb is a minor third (3 semitones).
Intervals larger than an octave are compound. A 9th is an octave + 2nd, a 10th is an octave + 3rd, etc. They share the same quality as their simple counterpart.
Consonance correlates with simple frequency ratios. The octave (2:1) and fifth (3:2) are the most consonant. The tritone (≈45:32) is the most dissonant interval in Western music.
Two notes with different names but the same pitch (in equal temperament), like C# and Db. The interval name may differ (augmented fourth vs. diminished fifth) but the sound is identical.