🎵
Protuningtool.com
Guitar Practice Drills • Chord Progressions • Real Audio

Free Guitar Practice Drills for Timing, Chords, and Clean Repetition

Practice 5-string guitar drills from easy to hard with notation, real note playback, chord names above the staff, loop mode, tempo controls, and clean chord-progression exercises built for practical daily practice.

5 Drills from easy to hard
4 Tempo options
Loop practice mode

Use these Guitar Practice Drills to practice chord progressions, arpeggios, timing, note reading, looped playback, and real guitar note audio.

Best Practice Flow

Tune the banjo, choose a drill, play the first note, then loop the pattern until the chord changes feel automatic.

Guitar on Protuningtool.com

Guitar Practice

These drills focus on chord-change timing, arpeggio motion, note reading, and clean repetition for guitar. The practice tool below is widened so the staff can show the full drill clearly without fighting the image column.

Guitar Practice Drills

Choose a drill, follow the chord names above the staff, and use real audio playback to lock in chord-change timing. These drills use single-note arpeggios so the page can play each note clearly.

Treble Clef • Written Key
Practice Focus
Chord Progressions
Guitar is typically written an octave higher than it sounds. This page shows the written key, treble clef, and chord names above the staff.
Start with Pop Progression (I–V–vi–IV), then move through harder progressions.

Choose a Drill

Each card outlines a chord progression using single-note arpeggios.

Easy → Hard

Active Drill

Ready

Notation + Audio

Select a drill to begin.

Tempo
Tip: Watch the chord names above the staff. Each chord is outlined with single-note arpeggios.

What These Drills Train

These are not random exercises. They are chord-progression drills that train timing, note awareness, chord movement, arpeggio control, and repetition discipline.

Guitar Practice Drills FAQ

Quick answers for using these guitar practice drills effectively.

FAQ

Is guitar written in concert pitch?

Guitar is typically written an octave higher than it sounds, as it sounds. This page shows the written notes and written key.

Are these drills meant to be strummed chords?

No. These drills outline chord progressions with single-note arpeggios so the audio can play one note at a time.

Do these drills use pitch shifting?

No. Each note has its own audio file for more realistic playback.

Can I loop a drill?

Yes. Toggle Loop On and the drill will restart automatically until you press Stop.

Why does the staff scroll during playback?

The staff scrolls so the highlighted note stays visible while the drill plays.

Turn Guitar Practice Into a Repeatable System

Tune first, run a drill, loop the hard section, then connect the same notes to scales and chord shapes.

Protuningtool.com logo