# Can You Learn Guitar by Yourself? Yes, If You Follow a Real Plan

> Yes, you can learn guitar by yourself if you practice consistently and follow a clear progression. The fastest self-taught path is simple: keep your guitar in tune, learn a small set of chords, practice with a steady pulse, and play real songs early.

Source: https://guitarwiz.app/articles/can-you-learn-guitar-by-yourself

Yes, you can absolutely learn guitar by yourself. Millions of players do. The hard part is not access to information anymore. The hard part is choosing the right next step and sticking to it long enough to improve.

That is why self-teaching works best when you keep the system simple.

## Short Answer

Yes. You can learn guitar by yourself if you practice consistently, focus on a small set of core skills first, and use tools that help you stay in tune, keep time, and find the right chord shapes quickly.

## What Self-Taught Players Actually Need

Self-taught players do not need fifty random lessons on day one. They need a small repeatable loop:

- Tune the guitar
- Learn a few useful chord shapes
- Practice changing between them in time
- Play a real song as soon as possible
- Repeat tomorrow

That is the real beginner engine. If you stay inside that loop for a few weeks, you will move forward.

## A Realistic First 30 Days

Here is a simple self-study progression that works well for most beginners.

### Week 1: Learn the setup

Focus on how to hold the guitar, how to tune it, and how the open strings are named. Learn one or two very easy chords like Em and Am.

### Week 2: Add basic chord changes

Bring in C, G, or D and start changing slowly between two chords at a time. Speed does not matter yet. Clean sound matters more.

### Week 3: Add steady rhythm

Start using a metronome or steady count. Even simple downstrokes at a slow tempo will help more than random strumming with no pulse.

### Week 4: Play full songs

Choose very easy songs with two to four chords. Finishing a whole song is more valuable than half-learning ten intros.

## The Biggest Self-Teaching Mistakes

Most self-taught players stall for the same reasons:

- They jump between too many lessons
- They learn new chords before old ones feel usable
- They skip rhythm practice
- They never play full songs
- They practice irregularly

None of those are talent problems. They are structure problems.

## Where Guitar Wiz Helps

Guitar Wiz is useful for self-taught players because it supports the exact routine above:

- The [Guitar Tuner](/guitar-tuner/) removes guesswork before practice
- The [Guitar Chords](/guitar-chords/) library shows shapes, positions, and sound
- The metronome helps with clean rhythm instead of rushed chord changes
- Daily-use tools like Chord of the Day make it easier to come back tomorrow

It is especially helpful if you are teaching yourself on Apple devices and want one app that keeps your practice loop tight.

If you want the longer version of this roadmap, read [How to Teach Yourself Guitar: A Complete Self-Guided Plan](/articles/teach-yourself-guitar-plan/).

## What You Should Expect

Self-teaching can get you to a solid beginner level surprisingly fast, but it will still feel awkward at first. Your fingertips will hurt. Chord changes will feel slow. Strumming may sound uneven.

That does not mean you are doing it wrong. It means you are in the normal early stage.

## Try This in Guitar Wiz

For the next seven days, do this:

1. Tune the guitar
2. Practice two chord shapes for five minutes
3. Spend five minutes switching between them with a metronome
4. End by playing one simple progression all the way through

That is enough to build momentum.

[Download Guitar Wiz on the App Store](https://apps.apple.com/app/apple-store/id6740015002?pt=643962&ct=article-self-teach&mt=8) · [Explore the Chord Library ->](/guitar-chords)

## FAQ

### Can I learn guitar in 3 months?

Yes, if your goal is a solid beginner level. Here is the realistic version: [Can You Learn Guitar in 3 Months?](/articles/can-you-learn-guitar-in-3-months/).

### Do I need a teacher to get started?

No. A teacher can help, but many players make excellent early progress on their own with a clear plan and consistent practice.

### What is the best guitar app to use if I am self-taught?

Start with [What Is the Best Guitar App to Use?](/articles/what-is-the-best-guitar-app-to-use/) if you want the broader app comparison.
