A “turn” in Sing It! Karaoke Battles on Roblox is basically one full performance from when you start singing to when the scoring screen pops up at the end.

Since the game doesn’t publish an official “turn length” number anywhere, players go by how the songs and rounds feel in normal servers and battle servers.

What counts as a “turn”?

In Sing It! a turn usually means:

  • You get selected or queue up to sing.
  • The backing track starts.
  • You perform the song (or a big chunk of it).
  • The round finishes and the game shows your karaoke rating / score.
  • Then the next singer’s turn begins.

So when people ask “how long is a turn in Sing It on Roblox?” , they usually mean “how long am I actively singing before it switches to the next person?”

Rough timing in practice

From gameplay and community clips, here’s what a typical turn feels like in real time:

  • Most turns last around the length of a short song section , roughly 60–90 seconds from start of singing to score screen.
  • In some modes or longer songs, it can feel closer to 2 minutes if more of the track is used.
  • There’s also a few seconds of transition before and after (announcements, score, next player load-in).

So if you’re in a busy server trying to get “another turn,” expect about a minute or so per singer , not counting queue time.

Why the length can change

There isn’t just one fixed number for all turns because:

  • Different songs have different lengths.
  • Some servers focus on battles and may use similar-length segments for fairness.
  • Updates can tweak pacing, queues, and how much of each track is used.

Players who grind cheers often optimize around this rhythm (for example, timing auto-clickers to match rating popups every few seconds), which only makes sense if turns are roughly a minute or more of active singing.

Quick example

Imagine you’re in a battle server:

  1. You’re picked to sing and your avatar walks to the stage.
  2. Music starts and lyrics show up; you sing through the main verse + chorus (about 1 minute).
  3. The music fades, you see your rating and cheers gained (a few seconds).
  4. Next player’s name shows up and their turn begins.

That whole sequence is what most people call “one turn,” and it’s usually around a minute plus some transition time.

If you need exact timing

If you really want the exact number of seconds for your favorite song/turn:

  • Join a normal or battle server.
  • Use a stopwatch on your phone.
  • Start timing when the music begins, stop when your score appears.

You’ll see most turns cluster somewhere around the 1–2 minute mark depending on the song and mode.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.