How to String a Guitar – Beginners Guide

how to string a guitar

Whether you have never changed your strings, or are looking for some tips to make it easier. This guide will cover everything you need to know about how to string a guitar.

In this guide, I’ll talk about the basics of how to change guitar strings. I’ll include instructions both for how to change acoustic guitar strings and how to change electric guitar strings. I’ll also share some tips and tricks to help things go smoothly.

Here is a helpful video from Fender that shows the steps to restring an acoustic guitar:

This video will show you the steps to restring an electric guitar:

What are Guitar Strings Made of?


Most guitars, whether acoustic or electric, have six strings. Four of them are wound strings with a heavier bass tone, and two are plain with a brighter treble tone.

The strings that hit the lowest notes are thicker so they can create rich bass. They’re usually made from a carbon steel hex core wire with another wire wrapped around it. The treble strings are generally a single strand of steel, sometimes with a nickel plating.

On acoustic strings, the wrap wire is generally either phosphor bronze or 80/20 bronze. On electric guitar strings, the wrap wire is usually nickel, nickel-plated steel, or stainless steel.

Classical guitars use strings made from pure nylon.

What String Thickness Should I Use?


Guitar strings come in full sets. These are usually categorized by the diameter of the thinnest and thickest strings measured in fractions of inches. You may see something like “.009 – .042” on the package. Sets of strings commonly get referred to by the first thickness listed, which is the thinnest string (the high E string). Eg. a set of 9’s.

Jazz guitarists tend to use thicker strings measuring somewhere around 11’s to 13’s. These produce louder, richer tones with more sustain. They’re also harder to hold down on the fretboard and more difficult to bend.

Similarly, metal guitarists commonly use 10’s to 12’s. These are thicker so you don’t have to worry about breaking them from playing hard and fast but still allow for easy bends.

If you’re a beginner guitarist, I recommend a light set with the thinnest string around .008 to .0011 in diameter. These will be easier to hold down and allow you to play for longer with less finger pain.

What is the Correct Guitar String Order?


Standard Tuning: E A D G B E

Guitar strings go on the guitar in order of their thickness and are numbered one to six. The thickest string goes on top and the thinnest on the bottom.

Known as the sixth string, this is the thickest string and is tuned to a low E note. Next, the fifth string is the A string, the fourth string is the D string, the third string plays G and the second string is B. Finally, the first string, the thinnest string, closest to the floor, plays a high E note.

How Often to Change Guitar Strings


How often to change the strings on a guitar depends on things like your playing style, how often you play, and the humidity and temperature of where you live. If you start to notice wear or dented spots on the strings, it’s probably time for a change.

You’ll notice as your strings age they lose that bright new sound and begin to sound duller. If you continue to play dull, worn strings, you are at risk of having a string break.

How to Remove Guitar Strings


1. Loosen the strings one by one until they have enough slack to rest gently on the frets. Start from the thinnest string, and work your way to the thickest.

2. Use string cutters, wire cutters or even toenail clippers to snip the strings, one at a time. Remove the remnants from both ends of your guitar.

3. If you have an acoustic guitar, you’ll need to take out the bridge pins that hold the ball end of the strings in place. Use a fork or a small flat-head screwdriver to lift the pins straight up, one at a time. Don’t pull at an angle, or the bridge pins might snap.

4. Take advantage of your empty guitar surface to clean some hard-to-reach places. Wipe the headstock, fretboard and around the bridge with a rag or sponge.

How to Restring a Guitar


If you learn how to restring a guitar using a simple S-bend, you’ll spend less time and have fewer accidents than with any other method. Stringing a guitar with an S-bend like a pro makes it easy to remove the strings from the tuning posts. If a string breaks near a tuning post, the end should just slip smoothly out of the opening without any struggle or specialized tools.

1. Let’s start with the thickest string. If your guitar is electric, just push the open end of the low E string through the bridge entry nearest to the top of your guitar. Pull it through until the ball end sits against its bridge entry.

2. If your guitar is acoustic, insert the ball end of the low E string into the bridge hole nearest to the top of the guitar. You can kink the string a little where it touches the bridge plate to make it easier to handle. Insert the bridge pin into its hole to keep the string in place. Don’t be afraid to press it in nice and hard to make sure the string doesn’t come loose.

3. Repeat the above steps for the rest of the strings, continuing with the thick fifth string and ending with the thinnest first string.

4. Now, let’s move to the other end of the guitar, where the head is. Make sure the holes in each tuning post point the same direction as the neck.

5. Starting with the thickest string, align it over its bridge saddle slot at one of the end of the guitar and its nut slot at the other end. Poke the end of the string through the hole in the closest tuning post and pull it tight.

6. Create some slack in the string between the bridge and the nut by placing four fingers between the string and the fretboard.

7. It’s time for the S-bend trick. Make a kink in the string in opposite directions above and below the tuning post. It works best if you bend both sides of the string at the same time. It should look like an S with the tuning post in the middle.

8. Rotate the tuning post to wind up the remaining slack. The tuning post should wind away from the middle of the headstock with the side of the string that goes down the neck coming off the inside of the tuning post.

9. Wrap the first coil around the open end of the string to hold it firmly in place. Each wrap should coil directly below the previous wrap so that the final coil is nice and snug against the headstock.

10. If you calculated the slack right, the thickest strings should get two or three full wraps, and the thinner ones should get around four or five. You don’t want too many wraps or they might pile unevenly on top of each other and make it harder to tune the guitar. If you use too few wraps, the string might slip out.

11. Snip the tail end of the string close to where it passes under the first coil. You don’t want to cut it too close or it could slip out. Don’t leave too much sticking out either, or it could snag on your clothes or skin.

12. Hook the string with your finger around the 12th fret, and bend it a little to stretch it out. This will help it stay in tune.

Repeat steps six through 12 for the rest of the strings, again working from thickest to thinnest.

Once you’ve secured both sides of all the strings, it’s time to tune your guitar. Keep the tension even by moving between strings, tightening each one a little at a time.

Useful Tips and Tricks


  • When you’re learning how to string a guitar, it’s easy to lose pieces. The most common guitar parts that go missing include the bridge pins, the nut, the saddle and the tuner bushings. To prevent this, make sure to change your guitar strings on an empty tabletop.
  • If it seems like you’re breaking more strings than normal, check your guitar for sharp edges. Common culprits include the edges on the tuning post, the saddle and the bridge.
  • You can use the graphite from a soft pencil to lubricate the slots in the nut. This lets each string slide smoothly over the nut when you tune the guitar and helps keep it from getting out of tune.

What to do Next?


After you have changed to a brand new pair of strings you’ll want to tune them. Check out our guide “How to Tune a Guitar – Easy Guide for Beginners“.

The only thing I would add to that guide is to make sure to give your new strings a good couple of stretches as they will go out of tune much sooner when new.


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How to Tune a Guitar – Easy Guide for Beginners

how to tune a guitar

An out-of-tune guitar is no fun to play, it makes practice difficult, and let’s be honest… It also sounds terrible.

Tuning a guitar, whether acoustic, electric, bass, 12 string, etc.. is as simple as matching the note you are playing with an in-tune reference. This reference could be a physical tuner, computer software, smartphone app, tuning fork, or another instrument. If you happen to know a pitch-perfect singer, that would work too!

Luckily, tuning a guitar is very easy and can be done quickly. I have included information below that will not only help you tune your guitar but understand more about the process and answer some questions along the way.

How to Tune a Guitar


Before we get started, the directions in this first section assume you have an electronic tuner. There are different types available, including the clip-on style (pictured right). If you do not have an electronic tuner, you can scroll past this first section and apply one of the other methods.

If you have an electric guitar, plug in your guitar’s cable to the guitar as well as the input of your tuner. If you have an acoustic guitar your tuner must have a microphone to be able to identify your note.

Turn your tuner on, wait for the visual display.

Make sure you turn up your guitar’s volume knob, obviously a non-issue for an acoustic!

Pluck or pick the thickest, closest string to you (low E string) and watch for the readout on your tuner’s display.

If the display shows you below the desired note you are flat and need to increase the tightness of the string by turning your tuning peg counterclockwise slowly, while still occasionally plucking or picking the string for reference until you reach perfect E tuning.

Congratulations, you’ve tuned your first guitar string, it’s that easy!

The steps to tune the rest of the strings are identical. The only differences to be aware of are the different string/note names: E, A, D, G, B, E, and the tuning peg locations…

Most guitars will either have all six tuning pegs on one side of the headstock (term: six in a line) or a split of three on one side, three on the other (term: side by side). They all operate the same way, counterclockwise to tighten, clockwise to loosen. It may be confusing as the G, B, E tuning pegs will be upside down but you’ll get it in no time.

Tune Your Guitar Using a Piano or Other Instrument


If you have access to a piano or another guitar/instrument (assuming they are in tune) you can match the pitch by playing a note, using it as a reference, and tuning your guitar to that reference.

Here are the keys you need to be aware of on a piano:

After tuning the E string you can continue with A, D, G, B, E matching each note with a reference on the other instrument. Or, you can use the method below.

Tune Your Guitar Using the Fifth Fret


Once your E string is in tune using one of the options mentioned on this page, you can tune the rest of the strings using the fifth fret as a reference to tune the string below it.

Looking at the sixth string (thickest, closest string to you), the open note is E. The first fret note is F, the second fret is F#/Gb, the third fret is G, the fourth fret is G#/Ab and the fifth fret is A.

Next, if we look at the fifth string just below E, what is it? That’s right, A! We can use the fifth fret on the E string to tune the A string as this is the same note!

This works for A, D, G, and high E (first string) on the fifth fret. To tune the B (second) string using this method you would use the FOURTH fret on the G (third) string for reference, not the fifth fret.

How to Tune a Bass Guitar


You would tune your bass guitar the same way we tune any other guitar. The only difference being a bass has only four (E, A, D, G) or five (B, E, A, D, G) strings. Again, keep in mind the location of the tuning pegs on the headstock.  

How to Tune a 12 String Guitar


To tune a twelve string guitar, we would reference “How to Tune a Guitar” above and use the same principles. The main differences here are, you guessed it, twelve strings instead of six.

This goes a bit further as we are now introducing another octave on our first four pairs of strings. The twelve string guitar has two strings where one would normally reside. There are six pairs of two strings. Each pair is tuned to the same note (E, A, D, G, B, E) however, the first four pairs (E, A, D, G) each have a low and high octave string. In the final two pairs (B, E), both strings in each set are tuned the same, both high octaves. Twelve string tuning goes like this:

String 12: Low E ←- Note the low and high pairs
String 11: High E
String 10: Low A
String 09: High A
String 08: Low D
String 07: High D
String 06: Low G
String 05: High G
String 04: High B ←- Note that from here on they are all high tunings
String 03: High B
String 02: High E
String 01: High E

Alternate Guitar Tunings


In addition to the standard EADGBE tuning, there are plenty of other tunings to try.

Drop D Tuning

To tune to Drop D, all you do is tune the low E (6th string) down to D. It’s that simple. You can easily tune to Drop D without a tuner by tuning the 6th string down to match tuning with the 4th (D) string. Pluck the D string, pluck your E string and tune your E string down until it matches your D string. The 6th string will end up tuned to D, one octave lower than the 4th string.

Some popular songs that are played in Drop D are:

Foo Fighters – Everlong
Click here for guitar tab

Led Zeppelin – Ten Years Gone
Click here for guitar tab

Neil Young – Harvest Moon
Click here for guitar tab

Linkin Park – What I’ve Done
Click here for guitar tab

Open C Tuning

Open C tuning is CGCGCE. Popular in songs such as:

Led Zeppelin – Friends
Click here for guitar tab

Soundgarden – Burden In My Hand
Click here for guitar tab

John Butler Trio – Ocean
Click here for guitar tab

Open G Tuning

Open G tuning is tuning your guitar to DGDGBD. In comparison to standard tuning EADGBE, you can see that you will only change tuning on strings 1, 5 and 6. Noteable songs in Open G:

George Thorogood & The Destroyers – Bad To The Bone
Click here for guitar tab

The Rolling Stones – Start Me Up
Click here for guitar tab

Eric Clapton – Walkin Blues
Click here for guitar tab

Other Notable Tunings

Other tunings to be aware of:

  • Drop A – A E A D F# B
  • Drop B – B Gb B E Ab Db
  • Drop C – C G C F A D
  • Open D – D A D F# A D
  • Open E – E B E G# B E

Different Types of Guitar Tuners


There are four main types of guitar tuners to be aware of:

Non-Chromatic:

These tuners only recognize standard guitar tuning: E, A, D, G, B, E. These tuners do the trick if you’re not worried about additional tunings. However, if you want to tune alternate tunings: Drop D, DADGAD, or other open tunings, etc… this tuner style is not for you.

Chromatic:

The chromatic tuner is the most common type of guitar tuner I’ve listed here. A chromatic tuner will show the current tuning of any string in relation to the nearest semitone (half note on a chromatic scale).

The chromatic scale contains twelve notes in ascending or descending order: A, A#/Bb, B, C, C#/Db, D. D#/Eb, E, F, F#/Gb, G, G#/Ab.

The chromatic tuner simply identifies the note you are playing and shows you if you are flat (too low) or sharp (too high).

These come as a plug-in type, both stand-alone and pedal, as well as microphone type, which may be included in other items such as metronomes.

Polyphonic:

Unlike a chromatic tuner which tunes one note/string at a time. A polyphonic tuner allows you as a guitarist to strum all of the strings at the same time and see the tuning of each string. Pretty cool, right?

Strobe:

For complete accuracy, strobe guitar tuners are the go-to tuner for music professionals. They use the hertz value of a chosen note and flash at the same frequency of that note. The flashing is the rotating of a disc that is set to a specific speed related to the frequency of the desired note. The more out of tune the faster the flashing effect. As you get your string closer in tune the flashing will slow and eventually, once fully in tune, the disc will appear to no longer be spinning, you’ve achieved the perfect tune!

Other Guitar Tuning Tools:


There are other ways to tune a guitar if you do not have a guitar tuner like the ones we’ve mentioned above.

Apps:

There are plenty of free tuning apps for your tablet or smartphone. A simple search on your preferred app store will show many options. I’ve include a few here:

  • GuitarTuna – Easy to use and responsive. A great all-around tuner for most stringed instruments.
  • Fender Guitar Tuner – Another fantastic tuning app from one of the most recognized brands in the guitar world.
  • gStrings Free – Simple to use, easy to read, gets the job done.

There are plenty of other options, these three are just a few of our favorites.

Online:

These are similar to the smartphone apps, just desktop/laptop-based. Some options just play a note and you match it with your guitar or with some, if you allow microphone access you can access chromatic tuning ability.

  • Fender Online Guitar Tuner – Again, what can we say, they do it well! This one just plays a note and you match it. Each string can be selected and you can loop the sound.
  • JamPlay Online Guitar Tuner – Chromatic style that requires microphone access to use.
  • ProGuitar OnlineGuitar Tuner – Similar to JamPlay, chromatic style that requires microphone access.

How Often Should I Tune My Guitar?


The simple answer here is every single time you play it. Tuning a guitar should always be the first step when you decide to pick up that guitar.

Changes in temperature and humidity, accidentally bumping the tuning pegs, aging stings, etc., all directly affect your guitar. It only takes a minute or two and the results speak for themselves. You wouldn’t sing out of tune on purpose, you shouldn’t play your guitar out of tune either, it’s no fun, trust us.

What About Travel & Storage?


The only times when you may leave your guitar out of tune or specifically tune it out of standard not for playing purposes would be traveling with your guitar in any environment that is not heat controlled, like the cargo hold of a jet, storage unit, a vehicle that is too hot/cold, etc…

What you would do in this circumstance would be to relieve some of the tension off all the strings. That way, if the temperature or humidity would force the strings to tighten. you won’t have to worry about the excessive force on the strings and neck.

How Do I Remember the String Names?


Don’t worry, soon enough it will become second nature. In the meantime, there are MANY different mnemonics that can help you remember!

Standard guitar tuning is: E A D G B E

Some of the most popular and easy to remember mnemonics:

Eddie Ate Dynamite, Good Bye Eddie

Every Amp Deserves Guitars, Basses Everyday

Mnemonics in reverse order (E B G D A E):

Easter Bunnies Get Dizzy At Easter

Every Boy Gets Dinner At Eight

There are plenty more, I find the best option is to make one up yourself, that way you are sure to remember.

What to do Next?


  • Learn the string and note names.
  • Familiarize yourself with the tuning pegs and their direction of rotation.
  • Practice tuning with electronic tuners and work your way up to tuning by ear using a pitch reference and tuning using the fifth fret method.

Final Thought


Always tune your string UP to the desired note from flat. If your string is too sharp or you tuned it too far past your reference, make sure you tune it flat (below) your reference and then adjust up to the note.

This makes sure the string is under the correct tension and doesn’t back off or store tension on the nut (see picture right) which could release and cause the note to go flat.

There are locking tuners available that provide more tuning stability. They work by clamping the string inside the tuning post.

Now go tune-up your guitar and jam away! Thanks for reading.


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