Learn /Rhythm

Time Signatures Explained: 4/4, 3/4, 6/8 and More

Time signatures tell you how many beats are in each measure and what type of note gets one beat. Here's a clear guide to understanding them.

Dan Farrant
·Published January 10, 2024 ·7 min read

If you’ve ever looked at a piece of sheet music, you’ve seen the two numbers stacked on top of each other at the very beginning — that’s the time signature. It tells you two essential things about how the music is organised in time.

What the Numbers Mean

The top number tells you how many beats are in each measure.

The bottom number tells you what type of note gets one beat. The most common values are:

4/4 Time — The Most Common Time Signature

4/4 time means there are four quarter-note beats per measure. It’s by far the most common time signature in Western music — so common it’s sometimes called “common time.”

3/4 Time — The Waltz

3/4 time has three quarter-note beats per measure. This gives music a lilting, circular feel — it’s the time signature of the waltz.

6/8 Time — Compound Time

6/8 is a compound time signature: there are six eighth-note beats per measure, but they’re felt in groups of two, giving the music a flowing, two-in-a-bar feel.

Simple vs Compound Time

Simple time signatures (2/4, 3/4, 4/4) divide the beat into two equal parts. Compound time signatures (6/8, 9/8, 12/8) divide the beat into three equal parts, giving them a characteristic “triplet” feel.

Written by

Dan Farrant

Dan Farrant is the founder of Hello Music Theory and a music educator with over 15 years of experience teaching music theory to students of all levels. He holds a degree in music and has helped tens of thousands of students prepare for their grade exams.

Free Resource Library

Learn music theory the right way

Join 40,000+ subscribers and get our free ebook with over 40 worksheets, quizzes, and cheat sheets.

Get the free ebook →