Need fresh music for practice or content?Try AI Music Generatorturn a prompt into a song.

GuitarTuner

Standard Bass Tuning

Standard Bass Tuning

Standard bass tuning uses E A D G from low to high and is the default setup for most four-string electric bass lines, lessons, tabs, and band arrangements.

Click to start recording

-
0.00 Hz
Target Frequency: 41.2 Hz
Share

About Standard Bass Tuning

Standard bass tuning uses E A D G from low to high and is the default setup for most four-string electric bass lines, lessons, tabs, and band arrangements.

Why Use Standard Bass Tuning

  • Matches most four-string electric bass tabs, lessons, and rehearsal charts
  • Keeps familiar fourth intervals across all strings
  • Works well for rock, pop, funk, blues, worship, metal, and general practice

Where You Will Hear It

Used across most four-string electric bass playing unless a song specifically calls for Drop D, down tuning, or a five-string bass.

How to Tune a Bass to Standard Bass Tuning

Use these steps to tune a bass to Standard Bass Tuning without chasing unstable low-frequency readings:

  1. Start in a quiet room, keep the bass close to the microphone, and play one open string at a time.
  2. Let the note ring for a moment before adjusting. Low bass strings often need extra time for the meter to settle.
  3. If the pointer sits left, tune up slowly. If it sits right, tune down slightly, then come back up to pitch.
  4. Use the speaker buttons when you want to compare against a real electric bass reference note.
  5. After the first pass, recheck every string because changing low-string tension can move the rest of the neck slightly.

Bass Tuning FAQ

Do I need different strings for this bass tuning?

Standard, Drop D, half-step down, and full-step down usually work on normal four-string bass sets, but very loose or very tight feel means you should check your gauge and setup.

Why does the meter react slowly on low bass strings?

Low strings have long wavelengths and strong overtones. Let the note ring clearly, avoid clipping the microphone, and give the tuner time to compare the pitch against the selected target.

Do bass patterns stay the same in this tuning?

Half-step down and full-step down keep the same interval relationships, so shapes move with the tuning. Drop D changes the lowest string relationship, so riffs that use the low string need different positions.

Electric bass reference samples are from tonejs-instruments and credited to Karoryfer under CC BY 3.0.