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Guitar Tuner

Tune your guitar using your microphone.

This tuner listens through your microphone to detect the pitch you play. The audio is analysed live in your browser — nothing is recorded and nothing is uploaded. Your browser will ask for microphone permission.

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How to use Guitar Tuner

What this tool does

This guitar tuner listens to your instrument through your device’s microphone and tells you, in real time, whether each string is in tune. Pluck a string and the tool detects its pitch, shows the nearest musical note, and displays a tuning meter with a needle that sits left of centre when the string is flat and right of centre when it is sharp. A cents read-out gives the precise amount, so you can dial each string in exactly.

Under the hood it uses a hand-rolled autocorrelation pitch-detection algorithm — the same family of technique used by professional tuning software. It looks for the repeating period in the incoming waveform, converts that to a frequency, and matches the frequency to the closest note in equal temperament. All of this runs in your browser; the tuner needs nothing but a microphone and a quiet moment.

When you would use it

Any time your guitar sounds slightly off. Strings drift out of tune with temperature changes, with playing, and simply with time, so a quick check before you practise or perform is routine for every guitarist. Beginners use a tuner constantly while their ear is still developing, and even seasoned players keep one handy because no ear is perfect against a fixed reference. It is also useful after changing a string, which always needs several rounds of tuning as the new string stretches and settles. Because the display reports any pitch, the same tool helps when tuning a bass, ukulele, mandolin or violin by ear.

How to use it

  1. Click Enable microphone and allow microphone access when your browser asks.
  2. Choose a string to tune. Leave the picker on auto-detect to tune by ear, or select a specific string (6 to 1) to lock the meter onto that target.
  3. Pluck one string firmly near the middle of its length and let it ring.
  4. Read the note name and watch the meter. The needle shows flat to the left, sharp to the right, in tune in the centre green band.
  5. Turn the tuning peg: tighten the string if it reads flat, loosen it if it reads sharp, until the needle settles in the centre.
  6. Repeat for each string. When finished, press Stop to release the microphone.

How to read the result

Standard tuning is E A D G B E, from the thick sixth string to the thin first. A correct read for the sixth string is E; for the first string, also E but two octaves higher. The cents number is the fine detail: zero is perfect, and you are comfortably in tune within five cents either side. Tune slightly below the target and then up to it — bringing a string up to pitch holds better than easing it down. The clarity percentage indicates how clean the detected signal is; if it is low, mute the other strings and pluck again in a quieter spot.

After tuning, keep your timing honest with the metronome or the drum practice click. To look up the exact target frequency for any string or note, see the note frequency reference, and to explore which notes belong together, try the piano scale reference. If you are working with a recording, the audio trimmer edits clips in the browser, and the Pomodoro timer keeps practice sessions on track.

Privacy

Your microphone audio is analysed entirely inside your browser. Each fraction of a second of sound is run through the pitch detector and immediately discarded — nothing is recorded, nothing is saved, and no audio or result is ever uploaded to a server. The tool requests microphone access only so it can hear the string you play, and it releases that access the instant you press Stop or leave the page. You stay in full control, and you can withdraw the permission whenever you like through your browser’s site settings.

Frequently asked questions

Why does the tuner need microphone permission?
To tune by ear a tuner must hear the string you play, and the only way a web page can receive sound from your room is through the microphone. When you click Enable microphone, your browser asks you to allow it for this page. The audio is fed straight into a pitch-detection routine running in your browser and is analysed moment by moment — it is never recorded to a file, never saved, and never sent anywhere. When you press Stop, or leave the page, the tool releases the microphone immediately. You can revoke the permission at any time in your browser's site settings.
Is my microphone audio recorded or uploaded?
No. The sound from your microphone is processed live, in memory, inside your browser tab. The tool runs an autocorrelation pitch-detection algorithm on tiny slices of the incoming signal to estimate the fundamental frequency, then discards each slice instantly. Nothing is written to disk, nothing is stored between visits, and no audio or analysis ever leaves your device. The microphone track is stopped the moment you stop tuning, so the browser's recording indicator switches off.
What do the note name and the cents reading mean?
When you pluck a string the tuner shows the nearest musical note — for a guitar in standard tuning that should be E, A, D, G, B or E. The cents value tells you how far the string is from perfectly in tune: 100 cents make one semitone, so a reading of -12 cents means the string is slightly flat, and +12 means slightly sharp. Aim for the centre band on the meter, within about five cents. Flat means the string is too loose, so tighten it; sharp means it is too tight, so loosen it.
How do I get the most accurate reading?
Tune in a quiet room — background noise and other instruments confuse pitch detection. Pluck one string at a time, firmly but not harshly, near the middle of its length, and let it ring without touching other strings. Watch the clarity percentage: a high number means the tool has a clean signal to work with. Tune to the note as it settles a second after the pluck, not to the initial attack. If a reading jumps around, mute the other strings and pluck again.
What tuning does this tool use?
It references standard six-string guitar tuning: E A D G B E from the thickest (sixth) string to the thinnest (first). You can leave it on auto-detect, where it simply names whatever pitch it hears, or pick a specific string so the meter scores you against that exact target — handy when a string is so far out that auto-detect would snap to the wrong note. The same note-and-cents display also works for tuning a bass, ukulele or other instrument by ear, since it reports any pitch you play.

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