FREE TOOL

Free Takt Time Calculator

Compute takt time — the pace production must run to match customer demand — from available production time, breaks, and demand. Optionally compare against your process cycle time to see if you can keep up. All in your browser, no account required.

HOW IT WORKS

  1. Enter available time — total scheduled production time and planned breaks or stops, both in minutes.
  2. Enter customer demand — the number of units the customer requires in that period.
  3. Read takt time — the pace, in seconds per unit, that production must sustain to exactly meet demand.
  4. Compare to cycle time (optional) — enter your actual process cycle time to see if you're faster or slower than takt, and how many stations are needed.
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Takt Time Calculator
Available production time ÷ customer demand — the pace production must sustain.
Available Production Time
Total scheduled shift/period length, in minutes.
Planned Breaks / Stops
Minutes to subtract for breaks, meetings, or scheduled stops.
Customer Demand
Units required from the customer in this same period.
Process Cycle Time (optional)
Your actual time to produce one unit, in seconds — leave blank to skip the comparison.
Takt Time
90.0sec/unit
Cycle time is within takt — the process can meet demand
Takt time is the maximum time allowed per unit to keep pace with customer demand.
Results
Net Available Time
450.00 min
Takt Time (min/unit)
1.500 min
Stations / Operators Needed
1

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FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS

What is the takt time formula?

Takt Time = Net Available Production Time ÷ Customer Demand. Net Available Time is the scheduled production time minus planned breaks and stops. Customer Demand is the number of units the customer needs in that same period. The result is the maximum time allowed per unit to keep pace with demand.

What's the difference between takt time and cycle time?

Takt time is set by customer demand — it's how often a unit must be completed to keep up with orders. Cycle time is how long your process actually takes to produce one unit. If cycle time is longer than takt time, the line cannot keep up with demand and needs more capacity, faster processing, or additional stations.

How do I calculate the number of workstations or operators needed?

Divide your process cycle time by the takt time and round up: Stations Needed = ceil(Cycle Time ÷ Takt Time). For example, a 75-second cycle time against a 90-second takt time needs 1 station; a 200-second cycle time against a 90-second takt time needs 3 parallel stations to keep pace.

Does takt time change if customer demand changes?

Yes — takt time is recalculated whenever demand or available time changes. Higher demand in the same available time shortens takt time (you must produce faster); lower demand lengthens it. Many plants recalculate takt time weekly or with each new demand forecast.

Should breaks be included in available production time?

No — subtract planned breaks, shift changeovers, and other scheduled non-production time from your total shift length before entering it as Available Production Time, or enter the break time separately in the Breaks field so the calculator removes it for you.

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