The ukulele is widely seen as the quickest string instrument to learn: three to four chords are enough to play your first songs, and its four soft nylon strings are gentler on untrained fingers than a guitar's six steel strings. With the right tutor book, you progress faster than with videos alone.
This guide compares tutor books and songbooks and sorts them by learning situation: child or adult, with or without note-reading skills, self-taught or in lessons. So you can find the book that fits you.
01Why the ukulele is so quick to pick up
The start is short because three to four basic chords are enough to accompany a whole range of well-known songs. The most common beginner chords are C, F, Am and G7 – with this handful you can cover children's songs, campfire classics and many pop tunes. The C major chord even needs only one finger.
Add to that the handy build: light, small, quickly tuned. A few minutes of practice a day is often enough to play a recognisable song within the first week. It is exactly these early wins that make the ukulele such a popular starter instrument – even for people who have never held a string instrument.
02Tutor book or songbook – what's the difference
A ukulele tutor book builds up step by step: posture, first strings, chords by difficulty, strumming patterns. It is the guiding thread for anyone starting truly from scratch who needs structure. Many tutor books include audio via CD or QR code/online, so you can hear how it should sound.
A songbook is a collection of songs with melody, lyrics, chord diagrams and grids. It assumes you already know the basic chords – in return, it motivates you with real songs. The usual order: work through a tutor book first, then expand your repertoire with a songbook. If you already play guitar, you can often start straight away with a songbook.
| Ukulele tutor book | Songbook | |
|---|---|---|
| Goal | Learn the basics systematically | Build repertoire, play songs |
| Prerequisite | none – true beginner | basic chords should be in place |
| Content | Posture, chords, strumming, exercises | Melody, lyrics, chord diagrams |
| Ideal for | First weeks, self-learners, lessons | After the first chords, playing for fun |
03For children: playful and picture-based
Tutor books for children use large chord diagrams, colourful pictures and short songs instead of music theory. They are tailored to pre-school and primary-school age and work well at home and in lessons. What matters is a child-friendly progression – one new chord per step, plenty of repetition, quick wins.
Two proven books to start with: Die Ukulelenschule für Kinder im Vor- und Grundschulalter - Rube, Martin is picture-based and free of note-reading pressure, ideal from pre-school age. Garantiert Ukulele lernen für Kinder (+CD) - Pold, Tom guides children through the first chords and songs with an included CD, so they can listen and play along.


04For adults: structured in the first weeks
Adult beginners benefit from a tutor book that leads quickly to the first songs and includes strumming patterns from the start. A compact, affordable book is often all you need to begin – what matters most is sticking with it and practising regularly.
Ukulele schnell und einfach lernen (+Online Audio) is an affordable, clearly structured start with online audio: chords, strumming patterns and first songs step by step. If you like to look up the right chord quickly while practising, add the handy Notenchecker Ukulele-Akkorde Fächer mit 140 Seiten – a fold-out fan with the most important chord diagrams to stand on your music desk.


05Songbooks: building your repertoire
Once the first chords are in place, a songbook keeps motivation high – because you play real songs instead of just exercises. For families and school use, collections of children's songs with melody, lyrics and grids are a safe choice, as most titles get by with just a few chords.
100 Kinderlieder: für Ukulele (Melodie/Texte/Akkorde/Griffbilder) brings together 100 well-known children's songs with chords and grids – enough material for many shared playing afternoons. You will find a wider selection of tutor books, songbooks and chord booklets in our Noten category.
In short: if you start from scratch, take a tutor book – picture-based for children, compact with audio for adults. Once the first chords are in place, a songbook keeps motivation high. For the right ukulele size, see our guide “Concert, tenor or soprano” (/blogs/klang-kontext/was-ist-der-unterschied-zwischen-einer-konzert-ukulele-tenor-ukulele-und-sopran-ukulele).
Frequently asked questions
How many chords do I need for the first songs?
Ukulele or guitar – which is easier to learn?
Do I need a tutor book if I already play guitar?
From what age can children learn the ukulele?
Which ukulele size suits learning?
Find the right tutor book
Tutor books, songbooks and chord booklets for children and adults – or the matching ukulele to go with them.
Browse sheet music & methodsExplore ukulelesPassende Produkte
The ukulele school for children of preschool and primary school age - Rube, Martin
Guaranteed learning the ukulele for children (+CD) - Pold, Tom
Learn the ukulele quickly and easily (+ online audio)
Note checker ukulele chords compartments with 140 pages