Rueda de Camelot
Click any segment to see harmonically compatible keys for smooth DJ transitions.
Click a segment on the wheel
How to Use the Camelot Wheel
- 1 Click any key on the wheel
- 2 See compatible keys highlighted instantly
- 3 Mix tracks with matching Camelot codes
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I use the Camelot Wheel for DJing?
What is the Camelot Wheel?
Is this a Camelot Wheel cheat sheet?
Can I mix different Camelot keys?
What is the difference between Camelot and Open Key notation?
Harmonic Mixing with the Camelot Wheel — A Practical Guide
Every song has a musical key — the set of notes it's built from. When two tracks share a compatible key, their melodies and basslines blend naturally during a transition. When they clash, the mix sounds dissonant. The Camelot Wheel maps the traditional Circle of Fifths to a simple number-letter system so you can check compatibility at a glance, no music theory required.
The three safe moves
Try clicking 8A on the wheel above to follow along. The highlighted segments show your three safe options:
- Same code (8A → 8A) — perfect harmonic match. Both tracks are in the same key. This is the safest transition and works for long blends.
- One step up or down (8A → 7A or 9A) — a subtle energy shift. Moving clockwise (+1) raises the energy slightly. Counterclockwise (−1) brings it down. This is the most common move in DJ sets.
- Inner/outer swap (8A → 8B) — a mood change. Same number, switch the letter. A → B moves from minor (darker) to major (brighter). This is how DJs shift the emotional tone without clashing harmonically.
These three moves cover the vast majority of harmonic transitions in a DJ set. Master them and your mixes will sound clean every time.
Advanced moves
Once you're comfortable with adjacent keys, three more techniques open up:
- Whole step (+2) — jump two positions clockwise (e.g., 8A → 10A). The classic key modulation used in trance and big room — a noticeable, dramatic energy lift that audiences instantly recognize.
- Energy boost (+7) — jump seven positions clockwise (e.g., 4A → 11A). This is a half-step key shift that sounds surprisingly natural and creates a subtle lift. Use it to build energy before a peak-time drop.
- Diagonal move (+1 and swap) — combine a step with a mood change (e.g., 8A → 9B). Riskier but effective for genre transitions where you want both energy and mood to shift simultaneously.
Tip: Always enable Key Lock (Serato, Traktor) or Master Tempo (rekordbox, CDJs) on your DJ gear. Without it, changing a track's speed also changes its key — and your Camelot codes won't match anymore.
Finding Camelot codes for your tracks
You need the Camelot code of each track before you can use the wheel. Three options:
- Buscador de llaves — drop any audio file and get the Camelot code detected by a neural network. Works with MP3, WAV, FLAC.
- BPM & Key Finder — get both tempo and Camelot code in one pass.
- DJ software — rekordbox, Traktor, and Serato all analyze key, though they may use Open Key notation instead of Camelot. The numbers map differently but the compatibility rules are the same.