Build Solid Guitar Skills in 60 Days
Two months to go from absolute beginner to playing 10+ songs with confident strumming and basic fingerpicking.
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Your Plan
First Chords
Weeks 1-4
Songs & Rhythm
Weeks 5-10
Expand & Perform
Weeks 11-14
The Plan
60 Days plan
20 tasks across 5 milestones — 3-5/week
Foundations
Days 1-10- Learn proper posture, hand position, and guitar tuning
- Master your first 4 open chords: Em, Am, C, and G
- Develop a basic down-strum pattern and practice chord transitions
- Play your first simple song all the way through
Chord Vocabulary
Days 11-24- Add D, A, and E major chords to your repertoire
- Learn 2 minor chords: Dm and Fm (partial barre)
- Practice all common chord transitions until they are smooth at 80 BPM
- Play 4 songs that use different chord combinations
Rhythm & Strumming
Days 25-38- Learn 5 strumming patterns covering pop, rock, folk, and reggae styles
- Practice palm muting and accent strumming for dynamic range
- Learn to count time signatures: 4/4 and 3/4
- Play 3 new songs focusing on rhythmic accuracy and feel
Fingerpicking Introduction
Days 39-50- Learn the PIMA finger assignment for classical fingerpicking
- Practice 3 basic fingerpicking patterns on open chords
- Play 2 fingerpicking songs: Dust in the Wind pattern and a simple Travis pick
- Combine strumming and fingerpicking in the same song
Repertoire & Performance
Days 51-60- Build a repertoire of 10 songs you can play from memory
- Practice transitioning between songs without long pauses
- Record a video of yourself playing your best song
- Perform for a friend or family member and get feedback
Obstacles
What gets in the way
Common challenges and how to overcome them
Challenge
Sore fingertips making practice painful
Solution
Finger pain is temporary — calluses form within 2-3 weeks of consistent practice. Start with 15-minute sessions and gradually increase. Nylon string (classical) guitars are easier on fingers if pain is a major barrier. Do not take multi-day breaks, as calluses need consistent building.
Challenge
Struggling to switch between chords smoothly
Solution
Practice chord transitions in isolation before playing songs. Set a metronome at a slow tempo and switch between two chords on each beat. Increase speed only when transitions are clean. Focus on the 3 most common transitions first: G-C, C-D, and Em-G.
Challenge
Not knowing what to practice or in what order
Solution
Follow a structured curriculum: open chords first (Em, Am, C, G, D), then basic strumming patterns, then simple songs using those chords. Add barre chords, fingerpicking, and scales only after you can play 5+ songs with open chords smoothly.
Challenge
Losing motivation because progress feels slow
Solution
Learn songs you actually love, even simplified versions. Record yourself monthly to hear improvement you cannot feel in the moment. Set milestone goals: first song, first performance for a friend, first barre chord. Progress is always faster than it feels.
Challenge
Overwhelmed by theory — scales, modes, intervals
Solution
Theory is useful but not required to start. Learn to play first, then layer in theory as curiosity demands. Start with just the major scale and the concept of chord families (I-IV-V). Theory makes more sense after your fingers know what it sounds like.
20min
Daily practice needed for steady progress
2-4wk
Time to play your first simple song
5
Open chords needed to play hundreds of songs
72%
Of guitar learners are self-taught
FAQ
Common questions
Start with whichever excites you more — motivation matters more than the instrument. Acoustic guitars build finger strength faster and require no extra equipment. Electric guitars have thinner strings (easier on fingers) and let you play with effects. Both teach the same fundamentals.
With daily practice, most beginners can play a simple song with 3-4 chords in 2-4 weeks. Songs like Knockin' on Heaven's Door, Horse With No Name, or Riptide use just a few chords. More complex songs with barre chords and fingerpicking typically take 2-3 months.
Not necessarily. Most guitarists use tablature (tabs), which shows finger positions on strings rather than traditional notation. Tabs are free online for nearly every popular song. Standard notation is useful if you want to play classical guitar or jazz, but it is not required for rock, pop, folk, or country.
20-30 minutes of focused practice daily is ideal for beginners. Quality beats quantity — 20 minutes of deliberate chord transitions and song practice is worth more than 2 hours of unfocused noodling. As you advance, 45-60 minutes becomes beneficial.
Self-teaching with structured online resources (Justin Guitar, Fender Play) works well for most beginners. A teacher helps correct bad habits early, especially with hand position and technique. Consider taking a few lessons at the start and then supplementing with self-study.
Barre chords are the most common wall beginners hit — they require significant finger strength and technique. Most people reach this wall around month 2-3. The solution is gradual strength building, partial barre chord forms, and patience. Nearly everyone struggles with barres before mastering them.
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