What BPM Is Hip Hop? A Producer's Quick Reference Guide
Hip hop doesn't have one BPM. It has a range that varies by era, subgenre, and regional style. Here's the quick reference every producer needs.
Hip Hop BPM Ranges by Subgenre
| Subgenre | Typical BPM | Notes | |---|---|---| | Classic hip hop (90s) | 90-100 | Samples pitched up, snappy kick/snare | | Boom bap | 85-100 | Emphasis on the 2 and 4 | | East Coast rap | 85-100 | Similar to boom bap | | West Coast / G-funk | 85-105 | Laid-back swing feel | | Southern rap / crunk | 70-90 | Slow BPM, heavy kick patterns | | Trap (project BPM) | 130-160 | Half-time feel; felt tempo is 65-80 | | Drill | 140-150 | Similar to trap, darker vibe | | Lo-fi hip hop | 70-90 | Relaxed, downtempo feel | | Phonk | 130-160 | Heavy swing, similar to trap | | Emo rap / SoundCloud | 130-150 | Melodic trap territory | | Club rap / hip house | 120-130 | Closer to house tempo |
Why Hip Hop BPM Has Such a Wide Range
Hip hop is primarily defined by its vocal style, flow, and attitude — not its tempo. This is different from genres like house (almost always 120-130) or drum & bass (almost always 160-180) where the tempo is part of the genre definition.
Half-Time vs Full-Time BPM
In trap and drill, the project BPM (set in the DAW) is typically 140-160, but the felt tempo is half of that — around 70-80. Classic hip hop and boom bap usually don't use half-time patterns — project BPM and felt tempo are the same.
When working with samples: - A boom bap sample at "90 BPM" means the project tempo is 90 and it feels like 90 - A trap sample at "90 BPM" might mean the felt tempo is 90, but the project BPM is 180
Always detect the actual BPM of the audio file before assuming.
Finding the BPM of Any Hip Hop Sample
Low End Candy's Key & BPM Detector returns the exact BPM of any audio file, along with the musical key and Camelot code.
[→ Find the BPM of any hip hop sample](https://lowendcandy.com)
Choosing a BPM When Making Beats from Scratch
Classic/boom bap: Start at 90 BPM. This tempo has a long history and tends to lock in a specific pocket feel.
Trap: Start at 140 BPM with a half-time kick pattern.
Mid-tempo: Try 105-115 BPM for something between boom bap and trap.
Lo-fi or chill beats: 75-85 BPM creates a natural downtempo atmosphere.
Your loops and samples should guide the final choice. If you're sampling something with a natural feel at a certain BPM, set your project to match.
Summary
Hip hop BPM ranges from around 70 (lo-fi, southern rap) to 160 (trap project tempo). The most reliable approach: detect the exact BPM of any sample before building around it. Then set your project to match the feel you want.
[→ Detect the BPM and key of any sample — Low End Candy](https://lowendcandy.com)
