In this free guitar lesson you will learn:
- The notes of a guitar in standard tuning.
- How to tune a guitar using an electronic guitar tuner.
- How to tune a guitar using a smartphone app.
- How to tune a guitar using other instruments.
- How to tune a guitar using its own strings (and your ears!)
- 6 tips to keep your guitar in tune & sounding great
How to tune a guitar in standard tuning
There are several different guitar tuning profiles, but the most popular one by far is ‘standard tuning’.
In standard tuning, the notes of the guitar, from thickest to thinnest are:
E, A, D, G, B, E
How to remember the notes of the guitar strings
Here’s two useful mnemonics to help you remember the order “E, A, D, G, B, E”.
- Elephants And Donkeys Grow Big Ears
- Eddie Ate Dynamite Good Bye Eddie
Pick whichever one you like best, or make up your own. (The sillier the better.)
Now we know the notes we’re aiming for we can tune the guitar
You’ve already learned the first half of how to tune a guitar, well done!
Now we need to look at how to tune a guitar to E, A, D, G, B, E.
How to tune a guitar to E, A, D, G, B, E
Look at your guitar’s headstock (the thin end of the guitar).
You will see small ‘keys’ that you can turn. We call these ‘machine heads’.
Each string is attached to a machine head of its own. When we turn a machine head we change the pitch that the string is tuned to
How do we know what note the string is tuned to when we’re turning the machine heads?
Easy. We use a tuner to tell us!
If you’re wondering how to tune a guitar with what you have at hand there’s 4 methods (we’ll cover each one in turn):
- How to tune a guitar using an electronic guitar tuner.
- How to tune a guitar using a smartphone app.
- How to tune a guitar using other instruments.
- How to tune a guitar using its own strings (and your ears!)
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How to tune a guitar using an electronic guitar tuner.
When people ask me how to tune a guitar I always say the same thing: All things considered, electronic guitar tuners are the best option.
They are fast and accurate. (When you have a decent electronic guitar tuner you simply won’t need to worry about how to tune a guitar again.)
The interface of ALL tuners is broadly the same.
You pluck a note and the tuner shows you the note you played.
The tuner shows you this in three ways:
- It will tell you the string it thinks you’re trying to tune.
- It will show you with an oscillating ‘needle’ how far away from the note you are.
- It will show you with a light whether the note is too low or too high.
On the picture above the ‘needle’ is perfectly in the middle. (Can you see the thin, black vertical line?)
Because the needle is perfectly in the middle, the green light above it is lit. This note is perfectly in tune!
We can see it’s tuning the A string (the 5th string) because in the top left corner it says “5A”.
- If the needle was over to the left, the green light would not be lit. The red light to the left of it would be lit and this would tell us the note was too ‘flat’ (too low).
- If the needle was over to the right, again the green light would not be lit. The red light to the right would be lit and this would tell us the note was too ‘sharp’ (too high).
Got that? Ok, let’s tune up!
1 – Turn the tuner on.
2 – If necessary, tell the tuner the string you want to tune. (Most tuners default to ‘auto-detect’ the strings,