Four little strings, and somehow a surprising number of choices hiding behind them. Should the top string be high-G or low-G? Is fluorocarbon worth it over plain nylon? How often should you swap them, and how do you actually restring the thing without it going hopelessly out of tune? This page answers all of that in plain English — no string-snob jargon, just what a beginner needs to pick the right set and put it on properly.
A standard ukulele is tuned g–C–E–A, low to high as you read them left to right — except that’s a little white lie. On the most common setup, that g string is actually the second-highest in pitch, not the lowest. So when you strum down, the notes don’t rise neatly from bottom to top. That deliberate jumble is called re-entrant tuning, and it’s exactly what gives the ukulele its bright, chiming, “ukulele” sound.
| String | Note | Where it sits in pitch |
|---|---|---|
| g (4th) | G | high — just below the A string |
| C (3rd) | C | the lowest note on a high-G uke |
| E (2nd) | E | middle |
| A (1st) | A | the highest |
Soprano, concert and tenor ukuleles all share this g–C–E–A tuning, so a set for one will tune to the same notes on another — only the string length differs. (The baritone is the odd one out, tuned D–G–B–E like the top four guitar strings, and needs its own set.) New to tuning entirely? Start with how to tune a ukulele.
This is the decision people agonise over, so let’s make it simple. The only string that changes is the g. Everything else stays put.
| High-G (re-entrant) | Low-G (linear) | |
|---|---|---|
| The g string is… | high, above the C and E strings in pitch | an octave lower — the deepest string |
| Sound | bright, jangly, classic “ukulele” | fuller, warmer, more guitar-like |
| Best for | strumming, traditional songs, sing-alongs | fingerpicking, melody & solo playing |
| Range | compact and chimey | extra low notes underneath |
| Chord shapes | identical | identical — nothing to relearn |
The crucial detail: your chord shapes don’t change at all. Low-G just deepens the bottom string, so every chart on this site still works. If you mostly strum and sing, stay with high-G — it’s what beginner songbooks assume. If you’re drawn to fingerpicking and want a richer low end, try low-G. You don’t even need a whole new set: you can buy a single low-G string (often metal-wound to reach that pitch at a playable thickness) and swap just that one.
Which do I have? Pluck the g string on its own, then the C string. If g sounds higher than C, you’re on high-G. If g sounds clearly lower and deeper than everything else, that’s low-G.
Ukulele strings are almost never metal — they’re a soft synthetic, which is why the instrument is so gentle on your fingers. The material changes the tone more than beginners expect:
| Material | Sounds like | Good to know |
|---|---|---|
| Clear nylon | warm, soft, mellow | the classic; cheap and forgiving |
| Fluorocarbon | bright, loud, lots of sustain | thinner & denser; barely cares about humidity |
| Nylgut | punchy, traditional, gut-like | white strings; the popular Aquila type |
| Wound | deep — used for low-G | metal wrapped on a core; can feel ribbed |
There’s no “best” here — it’s taste. Many ukes ship with Nylgut; a lot of players move to fluorocarbon for a brighter, more cutting tone, while others love the soft warmth of plain nylon. Strings are cheap, so the fun way to decide is simply to try a different set next time and hear the difference for yourself.
Ukulele strings rarely snap — they just quietly die. Here’s when it’s time for a fresh set:
A rough rule of thumb: every three to six months if you play regularly, up to a year for lighter players. Honestly, trust your ears — the day a new set goes on, you’ll hear how flat the old ones had become.
Restringing looks fiddly the first time and takes ten minutes the second. Change them one at a time so the others keep the neck under steady tension and you always have a reference for tuning. For each string:
Work through all four and you’ll have a complete fresh set. Then comes the part everyone forgets…
Brand-new synthetic strings stretch — a lot — and that stretch keeps pulling them flat for the first few days. This is completely normal and not a fault with your uke. Speed it along:
Keep a tuner close that first week. Fresh strings will need a nudge before every session until they settle — the bright, even tuning page has the four target notes and a quick way to check each string.
Now go play them in. The fastest way to settle new strings is simply to use them — strum some chords, run a few scales, let the tension do its thing. Open the app, pick a song, and break them in properly.
Got the right set on and settled? Get them in tune, brush up your chord shapes, and try them out on a song — new strings always sound best with something to play. And to keep them (and the whole uke) healthy, see how to care for a ukulele.