
Ukulele
The ukulele is small, gentle on the fingers, and you can play real songs within a week. It is widely loved as the most welcoming instrument for beginners.
What you need to start
- A soprano or concert ukulele
- A clip on tuner
- A chord chart
- A few favorite simple songs
At a glance
Your learning path
Three stages, taken at your own pace. Start at the top, get comfortable, then move down as you grow. There is no rush, and no wrong place to begin.
Start here. These four short lessons cover everything for your very first hour with a ukulele—holding it, tuning it, your first chords, a simple strum, and a real song you can sing along to.
YOUR FIRST UKULELE LESSON (Taught by a music teacher!)
Bernadette Teaches MusicHow To Play 12 Songs with 4 Easy Ukulele Chords
Bernadette Teaches MusicHOW TO Strum A Ukulele for Beginners - Ukulele Strumming Challenge | DAY 2 of 5
Bernadette Teaches MusicYour first ukulele lesson - Three Little Birds
Cynthia LinOnce your first chords feel comfortable, these lessons round out your playing—more chords, gentle fingerpicking, smoother changes, a favorite song, and how to read a chord chart on your own.
20 MOST IMPORTANT UKULELE CHORDS TO MEMORIZE
Bernadette Teaches MusicUkulele FINGERPICKING Lesson for Beginners: START HERE!
Pierre Hache MusicHow to Practice Chord Changes // Beginner Ukulele Tutorial
Cynthia LinSomewhere Over the Rainbow Play-Along + Tutorial (CC Chords + Lyrics) | Beginner Ukulele Lesson #5
Cynthia LinHow to read ukulele chord diagrams | Beginner ukulele tutorial
Ukulele Wine TimeReady to stretch yourself? These lessons take on barre chords, fuller fingerstyle, a little friendly music theory, playing melodies, and the confidence to perform for others.
How To Play Barre Chords on Ukulele
Bernadette Teaches MusicBeatles - Here Comes the Sun // Ukulele Fingerpicking Tutorial
Cynthia LinMusic Theory for Ukulele - Unit 1 Day 1 (Taught by an elementary music teacher)
Bernadette Teaches Music3 Steps to Ukulele Chord Melodies - Can't Help Falling In Love
Ukulele UndergroundHow To Overcome Stage Fright (For Ukulele Players)
Rock Class 101Why ukulele is wonderful after 50
The ukulele is one of the friendliest instruments you can pick up later in life. It is small, light, and easy on the hands—only four soft nylon strings, so it asks far less of your fingers than a guitar. You can make real music with just one or two simple chords in your very first sitting, which keeps it fun and rewarding from day one. It travels anywhere, fits in a closet, and costs very little to start. Best of all, it is wonderfully social: ukulele groups and strum-alongs welcome players of every level, and singing along comes naturally. It is gentle on the body and good for the spirit.
Your first month, week by week
Get to know your ukulele and learn to tune it every time you play, using a clip-on tuner. Practice holding it comfortably and strumming gently across all four strings. Learn your first easy chord (try C, which uses just one finger) and enjoy the sound.
Add the Am and F chords, then practice moving slowly between C, Am, and F. Don't rush—clean, relaxed changes matter more than speed. Try a steady down-strum in time with a slow count of four.
Learn the G chord to complete your first four chords. Practice a simple down-up strumming pattern and play along with a slow, familiar song like 'Three Little Birds.' Sing as you strum, even quietly.
Put it together: play a full easy song start to finish, keeping a gentle, steady rhythm. Set a small daily habit—ten relaxed minutes a day beats one long session. Celebrate that you can already play real music.
Common mistakes to avoid
- Not tuning before you play. Fix: clip a tuner on the headstock and check all four strings every single time—an out-of-tune uke sounds wrong no matter how well you play.
- Pressing the strings too hard. Fix: use just enough pressure to get a clean note, with your thumb relaxed behind the neck. Pressing harder only tires your hand and causes soreness.
- Strumming too fast too soon. Fix: slow right down. Strum in time with a slow count of four; speed comes naturally once the changes feel smooth.
- Skipping chord changes when they feel hard. Fix: practice just the two chords that trip you up, switching back and forth slowly until your fingers learn the move.
- Gripping the neck in your palm. Fix: keep your wrist relaxed and let the neck rest lightly between your thumb and fingers, so your fingertips can reach the strings freely.
- Giving up because one song feels too hard. Fix: pick an easier one- or two-chord song first. Early wins keep it fun and build the habit.
Make it easier on your body
Simple ways to keep ukulele comfortable and safe with arthritis, low vision, or limited mobility.
- 우쿨렐레는 선천적으로 작고 가벼우며 손에 닿는 느낌이 부드러워 관절염이나 손의 힘이 부족한 경우 연주하기 가장 쉬운 악기 중 하나입니다. |||9월||| 소프라노 또는 콘서트 크기를 선택하세요. 둘 다 가볍고 잡기 쉬우며 콘서트에서는 손가락이 필요할 경우 프렛 사이에 조금 더 많은 공간이 제공됩니다. |||9월||| 장력이 낮거나 부드러운 나일론(예: 탄화플루오르) 현에 맞는 악기 판매점에 문의하세요. 훨씬 더 쉽게 누르고 손가락 통증을 줄여줍니다. |||9월||| 카포를 사용하여 코드 모양을 더 쉬운 위치로 이동하므로 까다로운 키의 노래는 더 간단하고 덜 늘어나는 손가락 배치가 필요합니다. |||9월||| 패딩 처리된 우쿨렐레 스트랩을 착용하면 악기의 무게를 지탱할 수 있습니다. 그러면 악기를 지탱할 필요가 없이 손이 자유롭게 되어 초조하게 연주할 수 있습니다. |||9월||| 크게 인쇄된 코드 차트와 탭을 사용하고 우케를 무릎 위에 올려놓고 지지 의자에 앉아 연주하여 등과 팔, 눈의 피로를 풀어보세요. |||9월||| 당신이 듣게 될 말 |||9월||| 코드 |||9월||| 대부분의 우쿨렐레 노래의 구성 요소인 정해진 패턴으로 현을 눌러 함께 연주되는 음표 그룹입니다. |||9월||| 초조함 |||9월||| 목을 따라 있는 금속 스트립 중 하나입니다. 프렛 바로 뒤에 있는 줄을 누르면 들리는 음이 변경됩니다. |||9월||| 스트럼 |||9월||| 손가락이나 엄지손가락으로 모든 현을 문지르면 일반적으로 일정한 리듬으로 코드를 낼 수 있습니다. |||9월||| 핑거피킹 |||9월||| 현을 모두 함께 치는 대신 별도의 손가락으로 한 번에 하나씩 퉁겨서 더 부드럽고 흐르는 소리를 냅니다. |||9월||| 카포 |||9월||| 프렛의 현을 가로질러 배치되는 작은 클램프입니다. 피치를 높이고 코드 모양을 연주하기 쉽게 만들 수 있습니다. |||9월||| 탭 |||9월||| tablature의 약어입니다. 표준 음표를 읽을 필요 없이 연주할 현과 프렛을 보여주는 간단한 음악 작성 방법입니다. |||9월||| 당신의 사람들을 찾을 수 있는 곳 |||9월||| 지역 우쿨렐레 클럽 및 연주회 - 이러한 친근한 그룹은 모든 레벨을 환영하며 다른 사람들과 함께 연주하는 것이 실력을 향상시키는 가장 빠르고 즐거운 방법입니다. |||9월||| 노인을 위한 초급 우쿨렐레 수업과 캐주얼 즉흥 연주 세션을 자주 개최하는 노인 센터 및 커뮤니티 센터입니다. |||9월||| 직원이 우케를 고르는 데 도움을 주고, 부드러운 현을 제안하고, 근처 레슨, 교사 및 그룹을 알려줄 수 있는 지역 음악 상점입니다. |||9월||| 집에서 질문을 하고 노래를 공유할 수 있는 Ukulele Underground 포럼 및 Facebook 우쿨렐레 그룹과 같은 온라인 커뮤니티. |||9월||| Bernadette Teaches Music, Cynthia Lin, The Ukulele Teacher와 같은 YouTube 채널은 자신의 속도에 맞춰 무료로 친근한 수업을 따라갈 수 있습니다. |||9월||| 우쿨렐레 배우기 시작하기 |||9월||| 무료로 친절한 수업에 등록하시면 첫 걸음을 내딛을 수 있도록 도와드리겠습니다. 당신이 어디에서 출발하는지 알려주시면 그곳에서 만나겠습니다. |||9월||| 나는 그것을 시도한 적이 없다 |||9월||| 나는 조금 손을 댔다. |||9월||| 나는 그것으로 돌아가고있다 |||9월||| 이메일로 무료 수업 |||9월||| 실시간 수업에 대해 알림
- Choose a soprano or concert size—both are light and easy to hold, and a concert gives a little more room between the frets if your fingers need it.
- Ask a music shop to fit low-tension or soft nylon (such as fluorocarbon) strings; they press down far more easily and reduce finger soreness.
- Use a capo to shift the chord shapes into easier positions, so songs in tricky keys need simpler, less stretchy finger placements.
- Wear a padded ukulele strap so the instrument's weight is supported for you—your hands are then free just to fret and strum, not to hold it up.
- Use large-print chord charts and tabs, and play seated in a supportive chair with the uke resting on your lap, to take strain off your back, arms, and eyes.
Words you'll hear
- Chord
- A group of notes played together by holding down strings in a set pattern—the building block of most ukulele songs.
- Fret
- One of the metal strips along the neck. Pressing a string just behind a fret changes the note you hear.
- Strum
- Brushing your fingers or thumb across all the strings to sound a chord, usually in a steady rhythm.
- Fingerpicking
- Plucking the strings one at a time with separate fingers, instead of strumming them all together, for a softer, flowing sound.
- Capo
- A small clamp placed across the strings on a fret. It raises the pitch and can make chord shapes easier to play.
- Tab
- Short for tablature—a simple way of writing music that shows which string and fret to play, with no need to read standard notes.
Where to find your people
- Local ukulele clubs and strum-alongs—these friendly groups welcome all levels, and playing with others is the fastest, most enjoyable way to improve.
- Senior centers and community centers, which often host beginner ukulele classes and casual jam sessions designed for older adults.
- Your local music store, where staff can help you pick a uke, suggest soft strings, and point you to nearby lessons, teachers, and groups.
- Online communities such as the Ukulele Underground forum and Facebook ukulele groups, where you can ask questions and share songs from home.
- YouTube channels like Bernadette Teaches Music, Cynthia Lin, and The Ukulele Teacher—free, friendly lessons you can follow at your own pace.
Start learning Ukulele
Sign up for our free, friendly lessons and we will help you take the first step. Tell us where you are starting from and we will meet you there.

