Total shift time minus breaks, lunch, and 5S
Required output rate from customer schedule
Sum of all manual + machine task times to make 1 unit
Cycle time of the slowest workstation (bottleneck)
How many stations on the line today
TAKT TIME
seconds per unit — pace of customer demand
Bottleneck vs Takt
Required stations (theoretical)
Line efficiency
Balance loss
Max throughput / shift
Cycle time per station
Takt Time = Available Time / Demand
Required Stations = Total Work Content / Takt
Line Efficiency = Total Work Content / (Stations × Bottleneck CT)
Balance Loss = 1 − Line Efficiency

Takt Time

Takt time is the rate at which products must be completed to meet customer demand. It's the heartbeat of a production line — every workstation must be balanced to this beat.

Takt Formula

Takt = Available Production Time / Customer Demand

Worked Example

One 8-hour shift, 30 min for breaks → 450 min available. Daily demand 600 units.

Cycle Time vs Takt Time

Line Balancing

If you have 3 workstations with cycle times 50, 30, 40 sec and takt 45 sec, station 1 is the bottleneck. Options:

  1. Move 5 sec of work from station 1 to station 2 → 45, 35, 40
  2. Add a parallel station 1' to halve effective cycle time
  3. Reduce setup or wait time within station 1

Related Tools

Compare to actual Cycle Time. Track losses with OEE. Match production to Speeds & Feeds.