# Can You Learn Guitar in 3 Months?

> Yes, you can learn guitar in 3 months if your goal is solid beginner ability, not mastery. Three focused months is enough to tune confidently, play basic chords, keep time, and get through several simple songs.

Source: https://guitarwiz.app/articles/can-you-learn-guitar-in-3-months

Yes, you can learn guitar in 3 months, but it depends on what you mean by "learn." If you mean mastering the instrument, no. If you mean reaching a solid beginner level where you can tune up, play common chords, strum in time, and get through real songs, then yes, 3 months is a very realistic target.

The key is consistent, focused practice.

## Short Answer

Yes. Three months is enough time to become a real beginner guitarist if you practice most days. It is usually enough to learn open chords, basic rhythm, chord changes, and a handful of simple songs.

## What 3 Months Can Realistically Get You

At the end of three focused months, most beginners can reasonably expect:

- Reliable standard tuning
- Five to eight usable open chords
- Smoother chord changes
- Basic down-up strumming
- A few full songs from start to finish
- Better timing than they had in week one

That is meaningful progress. It is not flashy, but it is the foundation everything else is built on.

## A Simple 3-Month Plan

### Month 1: Build the base

Learn how to hold the guitar, tune daily, and play a very small group of core chords like Em, Am, C, G, and D. Spend more time on clean sound than on speed.

### Month 2: Improve transitions and rhythm

Start changing between chords with a metronome. Add one or two simple strumming patterns. This is the month where your playing starts sounding more musical instead of just technical.

### Month 3: Play real songs consistently

Use the chords and strumming you already know to finish full songs. Add one new challenge, such as a slightly harder chord, a new rhythm feel, or a longer song form.

## What Probably Will Not Happen in 3 Months

Three months is not enough for most players to:

- Play advanced solos cleanly
- Use barre chords comfortably all the time
- Improvise fluently
- Understand the whole fretboard

That is normal. A good 3-month result is not "advanced." It is "confident beginner."

## The Best Way to Practice for This Goal

The fastest path is usually 15 to 30 focused minutes most days instead of one long weekend session. A useful structure is:

- 3 to 5 minutes tuning
- 5 to 10 minutes chord review
- 5 to 10 minutes rhythm work
- 5 to 10 minutes song practice

That routine is also why all-in-one practice apps can help beginners more than single-purpose tools.

## How Guitar Wiz Fits a 3-Month Plan

Guitar Wiz supports this exact kind of beginner timeline well:

- The [Guitar Tuner](/guitar-tuner/) removes setup friction
- The [Guitar Chords](/guitar-chords/) library helps you learn and review shapes
- The metronome keeps your practice honest
- Practice-friendly tools make short sessions easier to repeat every day

If you are teaching yourself, pair this article with [Can You Learn Guitar by Yourself?](/articles/can-you-learn-guitar-by-yourself/).

## Try This in Guitar Wiz

For the next month, pick four chords, tune first, and spend ten minutes each day changing between them with the metronome. Then end with one simple song. That routine is enough to create noticeable improvement by the end of the first month.

[Download Guitar Wiz on the App Store](https://apps.apple.com/app/apple-store/id6740015002?pt=643962&ct=article-3-months&mt=8) · [See the Metronome feature ->](/metronome)

## FAQ

### Can I learn guitar by myself in 3 months?

Yes. Many people do, especially when they follow a simple plan and practice consistently. Start here: [Can You Learn Guitar by Yourself?](/articles/can-you-learn-guitar-by-yourself/).

### How long should I practice each day?

Fifteen to thirty focused minutes is enough for steady progress if you do it regularly.

### What is the best guitar app to support a 3-month beginner plan?

If you want one app for tuning, chords, and rhythm work, read [What Is the Best Guitar App to Use?](/articles/what-is-the-best-guitar-app-to-use/).
