32 Ukulele Strumming Patterns

Strumming patterns – some people can’t play without them, others never use them. Personally I never really know which pattern I’m playing unless I analyse afterwards, but  I know some people really need a strumming pattern to guide them through a song. With that in mind I’ve put together a PDF of 32 ukulele strumming patterns to help anyone that needs a little inspiration.

All of these strumming patterns are eighth note patterns so the best way to get to grips with them is to count 1 and 2 and 3 and 4 and throughout. Count out loud if you need to to begin with (if you can say it, you can play it) and miss the words where no strum appears.

I haven’t noted any songs alongside these patterns as I think you should let your ear guide you as to which you think works with the song you’re playing – also don’t feel limited to playing one throughout a whole song. Once I get a feel for a song I’ll make subtle variations to the strumming to keep it interesting.

32 ukulele strumming patterns

The patterns I’ve given you here are just to spice up your playing a little, feel free to experiment with them – try them on songs you don’t think they’ll fit into, you might be surprised.

Download 32 Ukulele Strumming Patterns

ukulele-strumsFurther Strumming Help

If you really want to progress your strumming at a rapid rate then I’d highly recommend taking a look at Al Wood’s downloadable ebook How To Play Ukulele Strums. For just $12 you get an in-depth guide showing you how to play 49 different strums with supporting videos and MP3 files. There’s also a really useful section that focuses on counting strums the easy way (something I wish I had when I was learning to play).

Buy How To Play Ukulele Strums

What To Try Next…

  • Try your hand at some advanced ukulele strumming techniques

Grab my free Ukulele Go! beginners pack.

29 thoughts on “32 Ukulele Strumming Patterns

  1. Thank you so much for the strum sheet. It is so well set out and easy to follow. A truly great idea.

    Reply
    1. You’re very welcome Veronica!

      Reply
  2. Great aid dave, printed out and clipped on my board. Thanks James

    Reply
  3. stumming patterns really helpful. Been learning since christmas. know about 8 chords but could you to a chord chart with single notes possibly. when looking up on internet for these i get so confused. a simple 4 or 5 single notes would really help. thanking you in advance.

    Reply
    1. Thanks for commenting Sue. I’m not entirely sure what you mean when you say a chord chart with 4 or 5 single notes?

      Reply
      1. lol Sorry for the confusion. I do not read music but what I mean is I know chords are made up of 2 or more notes. However, learning to finger pick someone said I needed to learn single notes. If this is correct I wandered if you could write it out and explain were the single notes are example F, C ,G and a few more? Not sure if this makes more sense to you. I am involved in a group but we are only strumming to songs and I wanted to learn more. thanks for any help you can offer.

        Reply
        1. No problem Sue – a really useful thing to do is to start to get to grips with your fretboard and understand which note is which. I wrote a post that goes into a bit of detail on this which you can read here… https://ukulelego.com/articles/get-to-know-your-ukulele-fretboard/

          Reply
  4. Strumming patterns seem to be my achilles’ heel of ukulele learning. I can sometimes fake a pattern well enough, but following one? This might keep me busy for months! And there’s a link to advanced ones? …

    Reply
  5. You surely don’t mean gambling Nicola?

    Reply
    1. Well, as long as we’re gambling, my money’s on Google Translate! Playing–>Gambling

      Reply
  6. Thanks for all your advice. It has been really helpful in getting me playing. I have started up a beginners class and everyone enjoying the strumming patterns. Wish I had started playing years ago. 🙂

    Reply
  7. Between barre chords and strumming patterns, I find this challenging. I am however persistent and practice daily. I will master these but it’s going to take a while. Thank you for all you great hints! Susan

    Reply
  8. Very grateful for the guidance,thank you.

    Reply
  9. I’m pretty sure I’m falling in love with you. ❤️ I started playing a year ago and have been taking lessons from a teacher all this time. I’ve repeatedly asked for help with strum patterns so all my songs don’t sound so samey but not gotten any farther or any real concrete help. This post is a game changer for me. Thank you.

    Reply
    1. I’ll take comments like that all day long! Thanks and I’m really pleased that it helped.

      Reply
  10. Hey,

    Thank you so much for this sheet and all other lessons, been great help! I have one strange problem though.. you know your “if you can say it you can play it”, well I can play some patterns pretty fast when I get the feeling but my problem is I lose the connection between counting and strumming in the speed, so I don`t know which beat I’m on and therefore if I should already change the chord or no. Does this make any sense? And if it does, do you have any tips? Aside from “learn how to count to 4” :)))

    Thank you, have a great one!

    Reply
    1. Not Dave, but if I’m understanding what you’re saying correctly, try this; Get a metronome (real or app) & start it up at a bpm you can count all the counts with. (1,2,3,4) As you do it successfully increase the bpm. Only count out loud, once you can follow count at higher bom start tapping your strum hand on your leg or table. After you can do everything correctly start over, but use your uku & strum the beats until you reach the higher bpm.

      Reply
  11. I love the way this site is organized and there is so much great content for beginners! Your teaching style is perfectly paced and I feel like I make excellent progress for the time I invest. Thank you so much!

    Reply
    1. Thanks for the feedback Tom, really appreciate the comment

      Reply
  12. I thought your info & v idea was great so thank you for sharing. I would have liked you to strum the patterns a bit longer so I could see & hear at the same time. By the time I read the pattern, your strumming was finished. I am a beginner, beginner so I learn by ear. Thanks again.

    Reply
  13. Cool information.. should add the different styles or genres in which those stumming patterns are used..

    Reply
    1. That’s a nice idea Pedro!

      Reply
  14. Thank you SO much for your site AND the awesome 32 strumming patterns video!! This was just what I was looking for as my strumming was all over the place your video was the motivation I needed here in my beginners stage of playing the ukulele!! ⚘

    Reply
    1. You’re very welcome Marianne

      Reply
  15. Very nicely and simply done, good visual aids, too.

    Reply
  16. Great chart and video clip to accompany. It would be REALLY good to include the Most Important Strumming Pattern D-DU-UDU. Did I miss the island strum on this chart?

    Reply
  17. I put a copy of this chart on my phone and practiced during a week long camping trip. This has really helped my knowledge of strumming patterns a lot. Thanks.

    Reply
    1. I’m glad it helped. Keep on flying Dutchman

      Reply
  18. This is a great post! I’ve been wanting to learn how to strum ukulele and this post has given me some great ideas.

    Reply

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