Learn to beatbox a simple reggaeton beat by practicing kick, snare, and hi-hat sounds, then combine them into steady rhythm patterns.



Step-by-step guide to Beatbox a Reggaeton Beat
Step 1
Stand in a quiet space in front of the mirror so you can watch how your mouth moves.
Step 2
Warm up your lips and throat by humming for 30 seconds to loosen your voice.
Step 3
Make a deep kick sound by popping your lips like a "B" and practice it on each beat while counting "1 2 3 4" eight times.
Step 4
Make a snare sound like a short "psh" or "kah" from your throat and practice placing it on beats 2 and 4 eight times.
Step 5
Make a short crisp hi-hat sound with a "t" by tapping your tongue to the roof of your mouth and practice it on every "and" (the off-beats) eight times.
Step 6
Combine the kick and hi-hat by doing the kick on beats 1 and 3 and the hi-hat on every "and" for eight counts in a steady loop.
Step 7
Add the snare into your loop by putting the snare on the "and" after beat 2 and on beat 4 for eight counts.
Step 8
Tap a steady four-count with your hand while you repeat the full pattern slowly for one minute to keep your timing steady.
Step 9
Speed up the pattern a little bit at a time until you reach a smooth reggaeton tempo you like.
Step 10
Share your finished beatbox reggaeton loop on DIY.org
Help!?
I don't have a mirror or a quiet room—what can I use instead so I can watch my mouth and record the loop?
Use your phone's selfie camera or a window reflection instead of a mirror, and if you can't post to DIY.org right away, record the beat on your phone to share later.
My 'B' lip pop doesn't sound like a deep kick and my throat hurts when I try the snare—what should I try?
Moisten and gently press your lips together to get a stronger 'B' kick sound and extend the 30-second humming warm-up while switching to the softer 'psh' snare to avoid throat strain.
How can I adapt this beatbox activity for younger or older kids?
For younger kids, slow everything down, tap the steady four-count with a hand and practice the kick and hi-hat on a simple '1-and-2-and' for fewer repeats, while older kids can speed up the pattern, add extra snare placements, and push toward a smoother reggaeton tempo.
How can we make the finished beatbox reggaeton loop more interesting or personal?
After combining the kick, hi-hat, and snare as instructed, personalize it by adding vocal basslines or fills between eight-count loops, recording overdubs with a phone or loop app, and then sharing the final loop on DIY.org.
Watch videos on how to Beatbox a Reggaeton Beat
🔥 Easy Reggaeton beatbox you can learn in seconds! #beatbox #shorts
Facts about beatboxing and rhythm
🗣️ Beatboxing blew up in the 1980s with hip-hop pioneers like Doug E. Fresh creating beats using only their mouths.
🥁 Reggaeton's core rhythm is called dembow — a kick-snare-hi-hat loop that makes people want to move.
🇵🇷 Reggaeton grew in Puerto Rico in the 1990s and tracks like Daddy Yankee's "Gasolina" helped it go global.
🎧 You can build a full beatbox track from three basic sounds: kick ('b'), snare ('psh' or 'ka') and hi-hat ('t' or 'ts').
⏱️ Start practicing the reggaeton beat slowly (60–80 BPM) and use a metronome to keep a steady rhythm before speeding up.