Practicing During Breaks

How to Keep Guitar Progress Going Over Spring Break and Summer

Breaks are great; more free time, less structure, a change of pace, it’s something kids (and adults) look forward to all year.

But when it comes to guitar, breaks can quietly undo a lot of progress. It usually doesn’t happen all at once. It looks more like this…

A few days off…
Then “we’ll get back to it next week”…
Then suddenly it’s been two weeks, three weeks, or longer.

When students come back, things feel harder. Songs don’t flow the same. Fingers feel slower. That’s when frustration kicks in and sometimes, that’s where momentum gets lost.

The good news?

You don’t need to practice a lot to keep progress going, you just need to stay consistent.

1. Lower the Bar (like A Lot)

During the school year, practice might look like:

  • 20–30 minutes

  • structured exercises

  • focused work

During a break, that’s not always realistic.

So instead of trying to keep the same routine, shrink it.

5–10 minutes counts.

That’s it.

A short, daily check-in with the guitar is enough to:

  • keep fingers moving

  • reinforce muscle memory

  • prevent backsliding

Think of it less as “practice” and more as staying connected to the instrument.

2. Keep It Daily (Even If It’s Tiny)

What matters most during a break isn’t how long you practice, it’s how often.

Ten minutes every day is far more effective than:

  • one long session every few days

  • or skipping entirely and trying to “catch up” later

Consistency keeps everything familiar.

When students maintain that daily habit, even in small doses, they come back from break feeling sharp instead of rusty.

3. Make It More Fun, Less Formal

Breaks are the perfect time to loosen things up, instead of only focusing on assignments, mix in:

  • songs you want to play

  • experimenting with sounds or tones

  • playing along to music

  • revisiting old favorites

This keeps guitar associated with enjoyment, not just obligation.

Sometimes the best thing you can do for progress is remind ourselves why we like playing in the first place.

4. Set a Simple, Clear Expectation

Without structure, it’s easy for practice to disappear.

A simple rule works well:

“We’re still doing a little guitar every day.”

That’s it.

Not:
“Practice perfectly.”
Not:
“Do everything your teacher assigned.”

Just:
show up consistently.

When expectations are clear (and reasonable), there’s less negotiation and less resistance.

5. Bring the Guitar With You

If you’re traveling, try to bring the guitar along, even if it only gets played for a few minutes here and there, it helps maintain the habit.

No guitar? Even visualizing or lightly reviewing material (like chord shapes or rhythms) can help keep things fresh until they’re back home.

6. Expect a Little Rust — and That’s Okay

Even with consistent practice, things might feel slightly off after a break.

That’s normal.

The goal isn’t perfection during time off.

The goal is not starting from scratch when you return.

A student who practiced 5–10 minutes a day will bounce back quickly.

A student who stopped completely will feel like they’re rebuilding.

Final Thought

Breaks don’t have to mean losing progress.

In fact, they can be a great opportunity to:

  • simplify practice

  • reconnect with music

  • build consistency in a more relaxed way

If you or your child can maintain even a small daily habit during spring or summer break, they’ll come back stronger, more confident, and ready to keep moving forward.

And that momentum?

That’s what keeps guitar going long-term. 🎸