Your first month of ukulele, week by week

What actually happens in your first 30 days with a ukulele — three chords in week one, a real song in week two, and the realization that this is the easiest stringed instrument to start. A practical map of the first 30 days.

By The JustBeginning Editors · Published May 8, 2026

The ukulele is, structurally, the easiest stringed instrument to start. Four strings instead of six. Nylon strings (not steel) that don’t shred your fingertips. Chord shapes that often use only one or two fingers. Most people play a real song within their first week of practice.

That doesn’t mean the ukulele is easy to play well — there’s a real depth to it for people who stick with it. But the first-month wall that exists for guitar and piano basically doesn’t exist here. You hit milestones faster, the early frustrations are smaller, and the ‘I sound like a real musician’ moment comes in week two or three instead of month two.

Here’s the realistic week-by-week, assuming 10-15 minutes of daily practice.

Week 1: Three chords and a tuner

Day one is unboxing the ukulele, clipping the tuner to the headstock, and getting all four strings in tune (G-C-E-A from top to bottom, with the G being unusually high — that’s intentional, it’s called ‘re-entrant’ tuning and gives the ukulele its characteristic bright sound).

a close up of a guitar neck and strings
Photo by Electra Nanou on Unsplash

Then you sit on the couch and try your first chord. Let’s say C. C on a ukulele is one finger — third finger on the third fret of the bottom (A) string. You strum, and… it actually sounds good. No buzzing, no muted strings, just a clean, bright chord. This is the moment ukulele beginners realize the thing about this instrument is real.

Spend week one on three chords: C, F, and G7. F uses two fingers; G7 uses three. With these three chords you can play hundreds of songs.

Your fingertips might be slightly sore for the first few days, but nylon strings don’t cause the painful calluses that steel strings do. Within a week, the soreness fades and barely returns.

The most important thing in week one: re-tune every time you pick up the ukulele. New strings stretch for 24-72 hours after they’re put on, which is most of week one. Tune. Strum. Play. Re-tune. By day four, the strings settle and tuning becomes a quick start-of-session check.

Week 2: First real song

Around the start of week two, the chord transitions start clicking. C-to-F is the easy one — just add two fingers without lifting the third. F-to-G7 is trickier; your fingers have to rearrange. C-to-G7 is the test. Spend a few sessions drilling these transitions, slowly, with no rhythm.

By midweek, you can switch between any of the three chords in roughly a second. That’s enough.

Pick a song. Riptide (Vance Joy) is the canonical first ukulele song — it uses Am, G, and C, and is so easy that ukulele players sometimes joke about it being mandatory. Somewhere Over the Rainbow (the Iz Kamakawiwo’ole arrangement) uses C, G, Am, and F and is the song most people associate with the ukulele. You Are My Sunshine uses C, F, and G7 — exactly your week-one chords.

Play one of these along with the original recording, slowly. It will be ragged. You’ll lose the timing. The strumming won’t match. Do it five times in a row anyway.

By the end of week two, you can play a recognizable song. This is faster than any other instrument on the planet.

Week 3: Strumming patterns

Week three is when the chord work feels easy and your right hand becomes the main event. The ‘down, down, up, up, down, up’ pattern is the universal beginner ukulele strum — it works on most songs. Practice it on a single C chord until your right hand does it without thinking, then add the chord changes.

A pattern that works specifically well on ukulele: the island strum (down-down-up-up-down-up). It gives songs that breezy, summery feel everyone associates with the ukulele. Once you have it under your fingers, songs you’ve been playing in flat ‘down-down-down-down’ suddenly sound like records.

This is also the week to add a fourth chord. Am (A minor) is the easiest minor chord on the ukulele — one finger, second fret, fourth (G) string. Now you have C, F, G7, and Am. That’s the four-chord pop song toolkit.

Try I’m Yours (Jason Mraz). It’s the four-chord ukulele song — every beginner plays it. The original recording is in B♭ but most players just play it in C and accept it’s a different key. By the end of week three, you can play the entire chord progression for I’m Yours through.

Week 4: Picking and a more interesting strum

Week four is when you start sounding like you instead of like a beginner. Two skills come into focus.

First: picking. Up till now you’ve been strumming all four strings at once with your thumb or index finger. Picking — using your fingers to play one string at a time — opens up a different kind of music. Try a basic ‘thumb-index-middle-ring’ pattern on an open C chord. It sounds harp-like, very different from strumming. Somewhere Over the Rainbow and many fingerstyle ukulele arrangements live here.

Second: more varied strumming. The simple down-up pattern you’ve been using gets repetitive. Adding a chuck — a percussive muted strum where you press your strumming hand against the strings to deaden them — gives songs a rhythm-section feel. Cynthia Lin’s free YouTube tutorials have the best explanations of how to integrate the chuck into a strum pattern.

By the end of week four, you can play three or four songs through, with chord changes mostly in time, with one strum pattern that varies. Real ukulele.

What month two looks like

By day 30:

  • You can play 4 chords (C, F, G7, Am) cleanly with one-second transitions.
  • You have one strumming pattern that works and one that’s emerging.
  • You can play 2-3 simple songs end-to-end.
  • You can fingerpick a basic four-finger pattern on an open chord.
  • You probably want a strap (you’ve started playing standing up).

This is more progress than you’d see on any other stringed instrument in 30 days. The ukulele’s gift is the speed of early progress — the curve flattens around month three, but by then you’re already a real ukulele player.

What to not do in your first month

  • Don’t tune to low-G. Some intermediate players use a low-G string instead of the standard high-G. It changes the sound dramatically. Stay on standard tuning until your first six months are done.
  • Don’t change strings yet. Factory Aquila strings are excellent and last 6-12 months.
  • Don’t buy a tenor or baritone yet. Different sizes have different chord shapes (baritone) or feel (tenor). Master your soprano or concert first.
  • Don’t skip the songbook. The Hal Leonard method teaches you to play; the Daily Ukulele songbook gives you reasons to play tomorrow. Both matter.
  • Don’t compare to YouTube. Algorithms surface 7-year-old prodigies playing technical fingerstyle pieces. They’re not where you are. You’ll get there if you stay with it; in the meantime, ignore.

The ukulele’s real magic is that it’s forgiving. Bad strums sound okay. Mediocre tuning sounds fine. Recovery from mistakes is fast. That makes it the rare instrument where ‘just having fun playing it’ and ‘getting better at it’ are the same activity from week one.


Need to actually buy your kit? See our ukulele gear guide for the right starter ukulele, tuner, and books.