How to Tune a Guitar

open string names for how to tune a guitarThis article will show you how to tune a guitar using our free online guitar tuner below. This online guitar tuner can be used in any browser, including those found on a mobile device.

Start by learning the note names for the guitar strings in standard tuning. From the lowest (thickest) to the highest (thinnest) string, the notes are E-A-D-G-B-E. The phrase “Even Average Dogs Get Bones Easily” might help you remember the correct order as you learn how to tune a guitar in this lesson.

Steps for How to Tune a Guitar

  1. Click on a note name button in the guitar tuner (above) to hear the reference pitch for that guitar string.
  2. Play the corresponding string on your guitar and listen carefully to hear whether it sounds higher or lower than the reference pitch.
  3. Adjust the pitch of the string higher or lower until the sound you hear matches the reference pitch from the tuner.

Electric and Nylon String Guitar Tuner ExamplesGuitar Tuning Tips:
It’s best to start with the pitch a bit lower and tune the string up to the reference pitch. This helps keep the string from getting caught in the nut and going out of tune as you play.

Make sure you know how to tune a guitar string higher or lower in pitch. To adjust the pitch of a string lower, simply turn the tuning key for that string towards yourself. Turn the tuning key away from yourself to raise the pitch.

These instructions assume that your strings are wound around the tuning pegs in the standard direction. The pictures to the left illustrate how the string should be wound for steel-string and nylon-string guitars. To learn more about how strings should be wound see the how to string a guitar videos.

Other Types of Guitar Tuners

You’ve learned how to tune your guitar with our reference online guitar tuner. Next, you might want to try one of the other types of guitar tuners. A digital guitar tuner is the most popular option, as they detect the pitch and show you visually to tune up or down to get in tune with a high degree of accuracy. Note that eMedia’s intermediate and beginning guitar lesson software includes a wonderful digital guitar tuner, metronome, chord dictionary and audio recorder. Those guitar tools are also available as a standalone product for Mac and Windows as the eMedia Guitar Toolkit ($4.95). When you need a portable digital guitar tuner, there are products like the PitchBoy mini tuner that can fit on a keyring.

How to Tune a Guitar
using the Relative Tuning Technique

The relative tuning technique requires that one string is already in tune. Then you tune all the other strings to that string. To do this you must use your ear to match pitches, just as when you learned how to tune a guitar with the reference pitches above. You must also know which fretted notes are the same notes as the open strings you’re trying to tune.

Alternate Guitar Tunings – Low, Drop D, Open G and Others

Guitar players often change the tuning of the guitar in order to get a particular sound or combination of notes in a chord. These tunings are called alternate guitar tunings. Sometimes this is simply changing all the open strings higher or lower by the same number of steps (low tuning), changing one string lower (as in drop D tuning) or tuning all the strings to an open guitar chord (as in open G).

Guitar Tuner Types

There are a number of tools available for tuning your guitar. This article outlines the most common guitar tuner types.

Digital Guitar Tuner

PitchBoy Digital Guitar TunerTuning a guitar is easiest with an automatic digital guitar tuner. An automatic guitar tuner is a device that detects the pitch of a guitar string and tells you whether the string is in tune, too low or too high via digital display. Automatic tuners receive sound input via a built-in microphone, vibration sensor, or a 1/4″ audio input jack. Guitar tuners with a digital display or LEDs are commonly called digital guitar tuners.

Digital guitar tuners can be very compact. The PitchBoy pocket-size, mini tuner ($9.95) can even fit on a keychain.

Automatic guitar tuners also come as software for Macs, PCs, and mobile devices. eMedia guitar lesson software (such as eMedia Guitar Method, Interactive Rock Guitar, etc.) features an automatic digital guitar tuner, as well as a metronome, guitar chord dictionary, and recorder. These four powerful guitar tools are also available together as the eMedia Guitar Toolkit, which at $4.95 offers an exceptional value.

Mac PC Guitar Tuner Software

Guitar Pitch Pipe

A guitar pitch pipe (seen below) has six pipes that are blown into to provide reference notes for each of the strings on the guitar.
Guitar-Pitch-Pipe

How to Tune a Guitar Using a Piano

Refer to the graphic below to find guitar tuning reference notes on a piano keyboard.

Guitar Notes on the Piano

Tuning Fork

When a tuning fork is tapped lightly it produces a sound that can be matched to an open guitar string. For example, a tuning fork in A would be matched to the open A, or 5th string. Some tuning forks are tuned to E or G, in which case you would match them to the open E or G strings respectively.

Tuning-Fork

When matching tones, keep in mind that tuning forks may produce a pitch an octave higher than the string they’re to be matched with. Once one string is in tune, the relative tuning method can be used to tune the rest of the strings.

Online Guitar Tuner

Use this free online guitar tuner to tune your guitar. Note that this online guitar tuner works on mobile device browsers too, so you can use it to tune your guitar anywhere.

To use this handy reference guitar tuner simply:

  1. Click on the button with the same name as the string that you wish to tune.
  2. Play that string on the guitar.
  3. Adjust the tuning machine (twist it away from you to make the pitch higher) until the string sound in tune.
  4. Repeat steps 1 through 3 until the tuner and string are at the same pitch.
  5. Repeat until all six guitar strings are tuned.

 

Tune Your Guitar Faster

For a full-featured digital guitar tuner that lets you tune visually, check out the eMedia Guitar Toolkit.

It takes the guesswork out of your tuning and also includes other valuable practice.

Guitar Toolkit

Features include:

  • Digital Guitar/Bass Tuner
    Play into your computer microphone or line-in and tune interactively with this highly sensitive guitar tuner. Reference tones are also included.
  • Metronome
    Complete with visual and audio click with tempos selectable by common tempo markings (Adagio, Presto, etc.)
  • Chord Dictionary
    Includes fingering charts and audio playback for over 250 guitar chords to make learning new songs easy.
  • Audio Recorder
    Record yourself and play it back for friends and family to hear!