Free Key Finder
Upload any audio file and instantly detect its musical key and scale. Powered by chromagram analysis, all processing happens in your browser.
Drag & drop an audio file or click to browse
MP3, WAV, OGG, FLAC, AAC, M4A
Analyzing audio…
Detected Key
--
--
Confidence: --
--
Listen to This Key
Compare Keys
Click any key to hear its chord and compare with the detected key.
Major
Minor
Related Keys
Pitch Class Profile (Chromagram)
Circle of Fifths
--
0:000:00
Try With a Sample Track
Don't have a file handy? Detect the key of one of these tracks from our free music library.
Need royalty-free music?
Browse our playlist of free tracks for your videos, reels, and creative projects.
Browse Playlist →Frequently Asked Questions
A key finder analyzes audio to determine the musical key (e.g., C Major or A Minor) of a song or recording. It uses signal processing techniques to identify which notes are most prominent and matches them against known key profiles. This is useful for DJs, producers, and musicians who need to mix tracks harmonically or transpose music.
Our key finder uses the Krumhansl-Schmuckler algorithm, a well-established method in music information retrieval. It works by: (1) converting the audio into a chromagram, which measures the strength of each of the 12 pitch classes (C through B); (2) comparing this pitch profile against known major and minor key profiles using Pearson correlation; (3) selecting the key with the highest correlation score. All processing happens locally in your browser using the Web Audio API.
The key finder supports all major audio formats including MP3, WAV, OGG, FLAC, AAC, and M4A. Any audio format supported by your web browser can be analyzed. For best results, use high-quality audio files (192kbps or higher for compressed formats).
No. All audio processing happens entirely in your browser using the Web Audio API. Your files never leave your device. This ensures complete privacy and also means the tool works offline once the page has loaded.
The Camelot Wheel is a harmonic mixing system popular with DJs. It assigns a number-letter code to each musical key (e.g., 8A for A Minor, 11B for G Major). Keys that are adjacent on the wheel are harmonically compatible, making it easy to mix tracks smoothly. Our key finder shows the Camelot code alongside the detected key.
The Krumhansl-Schmuckler algorithm is one of the most reliable methods for key detection. Accuracy depends on the audio content: songs with clear tonal centers are detected with high confidence (85%+), while atonal, highly chromatic, or heavily percussive tracks may yield lower confidence scores. The confidence percentage shown helps you gauge reliability.
The Circle of Fifths is a visual representation of the relationships between the 12 tones of the chromatic scale. Moving clockwise, each key is a perfect fifth above the previous one. Adjacent keys share many common notes, making them harmonically compatible. The outer ring shows major keys and the inner ring shows their relative minor keys.