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Takt Time & Cycle Time Calculator

Pace a line to demand. Enter the available time, the units required, and your actual cycle time to get takt time, the maximum output per shift, and whether you're keeping up.

min
#
sec/unit
Takt time
Max output / shift
Meets demand?
Cycle vs takt

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Takt is the heartbeat of the line

Takt time is how often you must finish a unit to meet demand — available time divided by required units. If your actual cycle time is below takt, you can keep up; above it, that station is a bottleneck. The cycle-vs-takt percentage shows how much headroom (or deficit) you have, which is the starting point for line balancing.

How it’s calculated

Takt = available time ÷ demand. Capacity = available time ÷ cycle time. You meet demand when cycle time ≤ takt.

Results update as you type and are estimates, not professional advice — verify important decisions with a qualified professional.

Worked example

450 available minutes for 400 units is a 67.5s takt; a 60s cycle keeps pace with ~11% headroom.

Common mistakes

  • Confusing takt (required pace) with cycle time (actual).
  • Forgetting to subtract breaks from available time.

Where it is used

  • Pacing a line to customer demand.
  • Spotting a bottleneck station for line balancing.

Frequently asked questions

Takt vs. cycle time?

Takt is the required pace set by demand; cycle time is how fast you actually produce. You meet demand when cycle time is at or below takt.

What counts as available time?

Scheduled work time minus planned breaks and meetings — the time actually available to produce.

What if cycle time exceeds takt?

That step can't keep up. Options include adding a parallel station, reducing the cycle time, or rebalancing work across stations.