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Guitar Lessons near you in United Kingdom

Known locally as guitar teacher. Compare researched prices and get free quotes from pros wherever you are in United Kingdom.

Typical price: £18–£500

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What guitar lessons costs in United Kingdom

Researched national ranges in GBP. City prices vary by cost tier.
Job size Low Typical High
Single lesson One private 30-60 minute lesson, in-person or online £18 £35 £55
Monthly block (4 lessons) Four weekly lessons booked as a block, usually discounted £70 £130 £210
Term package (~10 lessons) A term block of around ten lessons at the best per-lesson rate £170 £300 £500

Full guitar lessons price guide for United Kingdom

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How to hire a guitar lessons pro in United Kingdom

  1. Take a trial lesson before committing to a term block
  2. Match the teacher's style to your goal (classical, rock, exam grades)
  3. Confirm lesson length (30 vs 60 min) and in-person vs online
  4. If exam grades matter, check familiarity with ABRSM/RSL syllabuses
  5. Confirm travel fees for home-visit lessons
  6. Agree the term rate and cancellation/make-up policy

Frequently asked questions

How much do guitar lessons cost?

Lessons are priced per session, usually as a 30- or 60-minute slot, with the hourly rate falling if you commit to a monthly block. The biggest price drivers are the teacher's experience, whether lessons are in-person or online, and whether they travel to you (home-visit lessons cost more).

Should lessons be 30 or 60 minutes?

Beginners and younger children often do better with 30-minute lessons — focus fades and there's only so much to practise between sessions. Intermediate and adult learners usually get more value from a full hour. Start at 30 minutes and extend once you're consistently practising enough to fill an hour.

Are in-person or online guitar lessons better?

In-person is easier for absolute beginners — the teacher can correct hand position by feel and sight — while online lessons are cheaper, remove travel, and work well once you know the basics. Many learners mix both. Online only needs a decent camera angle on your hands and a stable connection.

How often should I take guitar lessons?

Weekly is the standard cadence that keeps momentum without outpacing your practice. What actually drives progress is daily practice between lessons, not lesson frequency — a weekly lesson plus 20 minutes a day beats two lessons a week with no practice.

Do I need to own a guitar before starting lessons?

Yes — you can't progress without one to practise on at home. A modest beginner acoustic or electric is enough to start; ask your prospective teacher for a recommendation and don't overspend before you know you'll stick with it. Some teachers keep a spare for the first trial lesson only.

Are lesson packages cheaper than paying per lesson?

Usually — monthly or term blocks typically cut the per-lesson price versus casual single lessons, and they also hold your regular slot. The trade-off is paying ahead, so take a trial lesson first to confirm the teacher is a good fit before committing to a block.

What are red flags when choosing a guitar teacher?

No structure or practice plan between lessons, big prepaid blocks demanded before any trial, no clear teaching goals, and one-size-fits-all lessons that ignore what you actually want to play. A teacher who can't explain how they'll get you to your goal is one to skip.

How much do guitar lessons cost in the UK?

Private lessons commonly run £20-35 for 30 minutes and £30-55 per hour, higher in London. Term-block bookings usually reduce the per-lesson price and secure a regular slot.

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See the full guitar lessons cost guide or browse all United Kingdom price guides.

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