Why Your Guitar Has Fret Buzz And How To Fix It

Fret buzz is one of the most common guitar problems players run into.

Sometimes it is only a small annoyance. Other times it makes the guitar feel cheap, hard to play, or impossible to enjoy. The difficult part is that fret buzz does not always come from the same cause.

It might be your technique. It might be old strings. It might be the setup.

The key is to work out which one you are dealing with before you start changing things.

What fret buzz is

Fret buzz happens when a string vibrates against a fret in a way that creates an unwanted buzzing sound.

That buzz may happen:

  • on open strings
  • in one small area of the neck
  • all over the guitar
  • only when you pick more aggressively

Where and when it happens usually tells you something important about the cause.

Beginner technique vs genuine setup issue

A lot of beginners buzz strings because they:

  • do not press firmly enough
  • fret too far from the fret wire
  • let fingers touch nearby strings accidentally

That kind of buzz is normal early on and improves with practice.

It starts looking more like a guitar issue when:

  • the same notes keep buzzing no matter how carefully you play
  • open strings buzz on their own
  • the buzz happens across large parts of the neck
  • the guitar feels generally hard to set up cleanly

Common causes of fret buzz

Technique problems

Especially for beginners, this is the first possibility to consider.

Action that is too low

If the strings sit too close to the frets, they have less room to vibrate cleanly.

Neck relief issues

If the neck does not have the right amount of relief, buzzing can appear in different parts of the fretboard.

Worn or uneven frets

This is less common for beginners to diagnose themselves, but it can be part of the problem.

Nut issues

If open strings buzz, the nut may be part of the cause.

Old or unsuitable strings

Dead or badly seated strings can sometimes contribute to buzzing behaviour.

What to check first

Start with the simple questions:

  • Does the buzz happen on one string or several?
  • Does it happen on open strings, fretted notes, or both?
  • Does it happen everywhere or only in one area?
  • Are the strings old?
  • Does the buzz disappear if you play more carefully?

Those checks will usually tell you whether the issue feels more like technique or setup.

Fixes you can try

Improve fretting accuracy

Press close to the fret, use enough pressure, and check that no finger is interfering with a nearby string.

Replace old strings

If the strings are tired, changing them is a low-risk first step.

Check whether the guitar may need setup attention

If the buzz feels persistent and repeatable, it may be time to review the guitar more broadly.

How To Tell If Your Guitar Needs A Setup is a useful companion page here.

When professional help makes sense

If the buzz is severe, happens across large areas of the neck, or clearly feels beyond simple maintenance, it is sensible to get the guitar checked properly.

That is especially true if you are not confident making setup adjustments yourself.

Final thoughts

Fret buzz is annoying, but it is usually diagnosable once you slow down and look at the pattern.

Start by ruling out technique mistakes and worn strings. If the problem still feels structural, treat it as a setup issue rather than guessing blindly.

  • Want to improve your guitar playing?
  • Guitar Tricks

    These lessons have been written by me, a guitar enthuthiast. I've written them to the best of my abilities, but I'm no guitar teacher!

    If you want award-winning, well structured but inexpensive lessons, I strongly recommend you check out Guitar Tricks. They have great range of video guitar lessons from numerous coaches specialising in a wide range of styles.

    I've seen their videos, and they're great. With these guys, I'm confident you'll be improving in no time!

  • Visit Guitar Tricks Now