For an adult first-time instrument buyer, the ukulele has the best fast-50% / slow-100% ratio of any common instrument. See Picking a First Instrument as an Adult for the comparison. This page covers the specifics of actually buying one: size, the tuner question, what to expect from new strings, and the basic chord shapes that unlock most songs.
Size — concert > soprano for adults
Ukuleles come in four sizes:
| Size | Length | Tone | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|
| Soprano | 53 cm | Bright, jangly, “classic” uke sound | Children, small hands, beginners under 150 cm height |
| Concert | 58 cm | Warmer, slightly fuller | Adult beginners (default recommendation) |
| Tenor | 66 cm | Fullest, most guitar-like | Serious players, larger hands |
| Baritone | 76 cm | Deep; tuned like top 4 guitar strings | Guitarists who want a smaller alternative |
For an adult-sized hand, the soprano feels cramped. The frets are narrow and fingers crowd each other on chord shapes. The concert is the right adult default — slightly larger frets give breathing room, and the tone is warmer.
Don’t skip to tenor unless you’re specifically chasing a fuller sound. The concert is the right balance for the “play 2–3 songs” goal.
What to expect from a starter bundle
A reasonable starter bundle (USD 30–80 in Korea and India) typically includes:
- Concert ukulele (usually mahogany or sapele wood — both fine for a starter)
- Clip-on digital tuner — see below; this is critical
- Gig bag (soft padded case)
- Capo (not essential at first)
- Spare strings
- Beginner chord chart or QR code to lessons
This is enough to start. Don’t worry about premium-wood ukuleles (koa, mango) for the first instrument — the cheaper woods sound perfectly fine and the upgrade question is months away.
The tuner question — the biggest beginner worry, solved
The biggest barrier for first-time string-instrument buyers is tuning anxiety. Without a tuner, telling whether the strings are at the right pitch requires a trained ear. With a clip-on digital tuner, it’s a 10-second deterministic process.
How clip-on tuners work
- Clip onto the headstock of the ukulele
- A piezoelectric sensor detects physical vibrations through the wood
- The screen shows: which note the string is currently producing, and how far off it is from the target
To tune: pluck a string, look at the screen, tighten the tuning peg if the indicator points left, loosen if it points right. When the screen turns green or shows a centred needle, the string is in tune.
Critically, these tuners are vibration-based, not microphone-based. This means they work even if there’s background noise — the TV is on, someone’s talking, etc. The sensor only feels what’s happening in the wood.
Universal across instruments
Most clip-on tuners are universal. They have a mode button that cycles between:
- U = Ukulele
- G = Guitar
- B = Bass
- V = Violin
- C = Chromatic (works for any note)
So the tuner that comes with a ukulele bundle works perfectly for a guitar later. In Chromatic (C) mode, the tuner tells you exactly what note the string is at, regardless of what instrument is in your hand. Most musicians use Chromatic for everything.
If you upgrade to a guitar later, click the button to “G” and the tuner now listens for the six guitar strings (E-A-D-G-B-E) instead of the four ukulele strings (G-C-E-A).
Specific tuner brand picks
The Snark SN-2 and the D’Addario NS Micro are both reliable, well-reviewed, and cheap (USD 10–20). Either is fine. The tuner usually included in a starter bundle is generic but functional — replace only if it dies.
The string-stretching phase
The single thing nobody warns first-time ukulele buyers about: nylon strings stretch dramatically for the first 1–2 weeks.
You’ll tune the ukulele at the start of a practice session. Fifteen minutes later, it’s noticeably out of tune. Tune it again. Fifteen minutes later, out again.
This is completely normal. The strings need to physically settle into their wound tension. Over the first 5–7 days, the stretching slows. By day 14, the ukulele holds tune for hours at a time. By month 1, it holds tune for days at a time.
During this phase:
- Tune at the start of every practice session
- Tune again whenever something sounds off
- Don’t panic and assume the instrument is broken
- Don’t try to over-tighten to “force” the strings to stop stretching (this just breaks strings)
After the stretching phase ends, the ukulele becomes very stable. You’ll go a week between tunings.
The four chords that unlock most songs
Almost the entire Western pop catalogue runs on four chord progressions, often the same four chords. For ukulele these chord shapes are:
- C major — one finger on the 3rd fret of the A string. The easiest chord on any instrument.
- G major — three fingers in a triangular shape on the lower frets. Most common transition target.
- A minor (Am) — one finger on the 2nd fret of the G string. The mood-shift chord.
- F major — two fingers, one on the 1st fret of the E string, one on the 2nd fret of the G string.
Once you can transition smoothly between C → G → Am → F, hundreds of songs unlock:
- Let It Be (Beatles) — C, G, Am, F
- No Woman No Cry (Bob Marley) — C, G, Am, F
- Stand By Me (Ben E. King) — C, Am, F, G
- Someone Like You (Adele) — variations on the same four
This is the famous “Axis of Awesome” progression. It’s the spine of about 40% of all Western popular music.
A reasonable first-month plan:
| Week | Goal |
|---|---|
| 1 | Learn the four chord shapes; practice transitioning slowly |
| 2 | Strum patterns: down-down-up-up-down-up |
| 3 | First full song in the C-G-Am-F progression |
| 4 | Second song; start to sing along |
What’s actually hard about ukulele
In honesty, ukulele isn’t perfectly easy. The specific hurdles:
- Muting unintended strings. Touching adjacent strings dampens the chord. Hand position has to be precise. Less of a problem than guitar but real.
- Chord transitions at speed. Slow transitions are easy. Strumming at song tempo requires the chord-change motion to be automatic.
- The barre F chord on tenor or larger. Pressing one finger across multiple strings. Doable on concert; harder on tenor. The standard 2-finger F shape avoids this.
- Singing while playing. A separate skill from playing alone. Some people find it easy; others struggle.
None of these is a 6-month problem. All are 2–4 week problems.
When to upgrade
Stay with the starter ukulele for at least 3–6 months. If you’re still playing daily and have learned 5+ songs, then consider an upgrade.
Upgrade options worth knowing (USD 150–400 range):
- Kala KA-C or Kala KA-CG (concert) — mid-tier solid-wood ukuleles; warmer tone than laminate starters
- Cordoba 20CM-CE — Spanish guitar manufacturer’s ukulele line; excellent build
- Pono PC concert — Hawaiian-made, premium feel, beyond beginner needs but a beautiful instrument
Don’t upgrade in the first 3 months. You can’t yet tell the difference, and the cheaper instrument is teaching you the same skills.