Bad habits are far easier to prevent than to fix later. Use this checklist regularly to audit your own technique and catch any problems early. Every point here directly affects the quality of your playing.
Check your playing regularly to avoid getting into bad habits. Bad habits on guitar are very difficult to undo once they are established, because muscle memory reinforces them every time you play. A few minutes of honest self-assessment every week can save months of frustration later.
If there is anything you did not understand or remember from earlier lessons, go back and read those sections again before continuing. Everything in this checklist refers to techniques covered in previous lessons.
Run through this checklist at the start of every practice session for the first three months. After that, check weekly. Catching a bad habit in the first week takes minutes to fix. Catching it after six months of reinforcement can take weeks of conscious effort to correct.
If you discover a bad habit, the best approach is to isolate the problem and practice it specifically and slowly. For example, if your thumb bends when you play: put down the guitar, place your thumb correctly against a straight surface, and feel what straight feels like. Then pick up the guitar and consciously check your thumb position every few minutes while playing.
Never try to fix a technique problem at full speed — slow down significantly so you have time to think about what your body is doing. Speed can be rebuilt quickly once the correct movement is in place.
Everything guitarists ask about this topic
The most common mistakes are: holding the guitar tilted back (should be vertical), bending the left thumb (should stay straight), pressing too hard on strings (use minimum pressure for a clear note), using the wrong finger for a fret (one finger per fret always), not checking tuning before playing, and not keeping rhythm steady.
Muffled or dead notes in chords are usually caused by: a finger accidentally touching an adjacent string, not pressing hard enough just behind the fret, pressing too far from the fret (causing buzz), or pressing on the fret itself rather than behind it. Play each string of the chord individually to find which note is not ringing clearly, then adjust that finger.
Uneven playing is almost always a rhythm problem. Start tapping your foot to a steady beat and play with the tap. If your playing speeds up or slows down, you are not keeping time. Practice with a metronome at a very slow tempo until every note falls exactly on the beat. Never increase speed until your playing is completely even at the current tempo.
Consciously check your thumb position every time you pick up the guitar. Place your thumb flat against the back of the neck — it should press with the middle part, not the tip, and never bend at the joint. If it keeps bending, practice chord shapes very slowly while looking at your thumb. Muscle memory will correct this within a few weeks of consistent attention.
Absolutely normal. Every guitarist struggles at the beginning with sore fingertips, buzzing strings, slow chord changes, and uneven rhythm. These are all temporary problems that resolve with practice. The key is to practice correctly — slowly, with proper technique — rather than just playing a lot. Quality of practice matters more than quantity.