The voice is such a powerful and vulnerable thing. Over the past few years, I’ve worked with many different clients with a variety of vocal needs. One of the most consistent things that happen is the vocal folds will crack/disconnect when singing.
It can be an awkward moment for the client but it does not need to be! I have experienced many voice cracks as I sing but it has lessened more and more over time. My goal here is to help you understand what is safe for the vocal folds to experience and what is not. Let’s talk about voice cracks!
What is a voice crack?
It is a disconnection in your vocal folds which is caused by weakness, tension, or even puberty.
Fast-Track Your Success!!

VIP Membership includes:
- Exclusive Facebook Group
- Interact with our vocal coaches–ask them YOUR question
- Live warmups
- Masterclasses and Q&As with Brett Manning and his guests
- SS360 QuickStart Program
- SS360 – The FULL Systematic Vocal Course
- Vocal Hacks
- Range Builder
- Mastering Mix
- Mastering Harmony
- Mastering Vibrato
- Vocal Therapy
- Plus…exclusive content only found here all along the way!
You can struggle on your own, or you can get direct access to the Nashville Coaches who have launched some of the biggest names in the music industry.
Weak or Tense
When your vocal folds vibrate they have areas they are used to and areas they are not. Your voice cracks specifically in the areas you are weak or very tense. It is like when you are doing push-ups and you hit that point where you no longer can do the movement. Your muscles give out. Your vocal cords give out too. This can potentially happen in all the notes you sing but is normally present in extreme areas like low notes, transition points, and when you sing higher.
Puberty
A common place you hear voice cracks is in the development process known as the secondary sexual characteristics of the vocal cords, which is just referring to puberty. The voice box goes through a ton of changes which causes the vocal folds to glitch. During this time you would just have to have grace on your vocal cords until it smooths out.
Do all voice cracks sound the same?
I would categorize them in two separate camps but both are just a disconnection of sound. It is a completely normal experience when singing so remember that! Most of the time it happens when singing but you could even experience this while talking.
Just air
One kind of crack is when your vocal folds go from phonating to just air. This means you were making a sound and now there is nothing. Preventing voice cracks is a fine goal but this kind of crack can be perfectly acceptable. When I work with clients and they are singing with a lot of tension I will actually encourage them to break. I want the singer to find the proper form first and if that means experiencing some disconnection then so be it.From one sound to another
The other kind of vocal crack is when you sing one way and it disconnects into some other completely different sound. Often times a singer will be singing too heavy and get overloaded so their vocal folds give out. The most common way this happens is when someone pulls up their chest voice and from this overload their voice breaks into head voice. You may also notice a lot of vocal fatigue coming in abnormally fast. Every singer will get tired eventually but some things speed it up more than others. Now, this type of voice crack can be intentional. If you are singing in your mix and let it break into the head voice to add some drama or style then you are good.
Is it bad when your vocal cords give out?
It depends! If you are you forcing too much from your voice? Then yes. If your voice is just weak and cannot hold on any longer? Then no. It is not necessary to prevent voice cracks when it is for strengthening purposes. They should smooth out as your vocal folds get stronger and stronger. On the flip side, if you are causing excess tension on your vocal cords, it is important to stop for your vocal protection. Consistent abuse of the vocal muscles can potentially cause damage to the cords.What does it mean to “force” something from your voice?
This “force” typically happens when you are singing in your comfortable vocal range and your voice eventually runs into an area where you are no longer comfortable. At this moment you can choose to give your voice a little extra push and that extra push is excessive force. This force or “tension” is most noticeable when you are singing high notes or your voice is in a transition point. You will notice in these tense areas the tone becomes increasingly more squeezed as you go higher and higher in pitch until you run into an immovable wall. You may even notice your pitch becoming flat. This is typically where your voice cracks. Sometimes you can make it out without a crack but not without a ton of tension. This tension wants to prevent the voice from cracking. The problem is the tension takes away the work from the actually vocal folds so your cords do not get the full workout and end up relying on the assistance of “tension”.How do I know when my voice is weak?
You will know that your voice is weak when you cannot sing something without tension or there just simply is no sound. There are times your vocal cords just need to be reset and we will talk about that in a second, but when you allow your voice to sing without the “assistance” of tension you are left with what your singing voice can do on its own. This is where the singer meets their vocal cords disconnecting, cracking, or no sound at all. As we’ve discussed the vocal crack is just a disconnection in the vocal cords. While you can lessen these voice cracks, a voice crack is not the enemy. It may be a sign of weakness but think of that as needed information. A big takeaway here is the vocal folds struggle when in an unknown area. That struggle is perfectly normal to experience when doing something new. We just want the struggle you experience when you sing to be safe and bring growth.How do you remove voice cracks?
