How to Record Guitar on a Laptop: Complete Setup Guide

Record guitar on your laptop: pick an audio interface, set up amp sim software, dial in latency, and start recording. Complete guide for beginners and intermediate players.

guitar, recording, laptop, audio interface, setup, beginner

Recording guitar on a laptop requires three things: an audio interface, amp simulation software, and correct latency settings. Here's the complete setup.

The audio interface

Your laptop's built-in microphone won't work for recording guitar. You need an audio interface — a box that converts your guitar's analog signal to digital.

Recommended: Focusrite Scarlett Solo ($100-120). It's the standard recommendation for a reason: low latency, good preamp, instrument-level input, reliable drivers.

Setup:

  1. Connect interface to laptop via USB
  2. Plug guitar into the instrument input (marked with a guitar icon)
  3. Set the input gain so the LED stays green (not red) when you play hard
  4. Install drivers if needed (Focusrite uses class-compliant drivers on Mac, requires download on Windows)

Amp simulation software

Your interface captures a dry signal. Amp sim software makes it sound like a guitar amp.

Free options: Tonex CS, AmpliTube CS, Guitar Rig Player. All offer a limited selection of amps and effects for free.

Paid: Neural DSP ($100-150 per plugin), AmpliTube 5 ($150-300), Guitar Rig 6 ($200).

Practice-focused: Practice Rack ($19 lifetime). Built for daily practice rather than tone exploration — tuner, core effects, looper, recorder in one window.

Latency: the most important setting

Latency is the delay between picking a note and hearing it. Too high and you can't play in time.

Target: Under 10ms round-trip.

How to set:

  • Buffer size: 64 or 128 samples (lower = less latency but more CPU load)
  • Sample rate: 44.1kHz or 48kHz (higher = slightly more latency)
  • If you hear crackles, increase the buffer
  • If you feel a delay between playing and hearing, decrease the buffer

Test: Play a fast picking passage. If it feels disconnected from what you hear, latency is too high.

The complete signal chain

Guitar → Interface (Hi-Z input) → USB → Laptop → Amp Sim → Headphones/Speakers

That's it. Four links. Each one matters — a bad cable, a noisy interface, or wrong buffer settings will degrade the sound.