How to Stop Leaking Finger Holes on Tin Whistle

Stop leaking finger holes on tin whistle with better finger pads, lower finger lifts, and short seal-check drills.

How to Stop Leaking Finger Holes on Tin Whistle

Leaking finger holes make almost every other problem harder. They create airy notes, unstable attacks, and shaky transitions even when your breath is mostly fine.

Check whether this is your problem

  • Some notes sound fuzzy even at slow speed
  • The same fingering sometimes works and sometimes does not
  • Note changes sound noisier than the notes themselves

Cause 1: The finger pads are not landing fully

Most leaks happen because the finger lands at an angle or on the tip instead of the pad. Small adjustments in shape usually help more than extra pressure.

Reset the seal

Use these bars to hear whether the fingers are covering the holes before speed gets involved.

Hover a control to see what it does.

Fingering --
Heard -- --

Cause 2: The fingers lift too far

High lifts make accurate landings harder. Keep the fingers hovering close so they can close the holes predictably.

Catch leaks during movement

This pattern exposes small leaks the moment the fingers start moving too much.

Hover a control to see what it does.

Fingering --
Heard -- --

Common mistakes

  • Pressing hard instead of sealing efficiently
  • Letting the hand roll sideways during changes
  • Practicing fast with unreliable coverage

Challenge Progress

Complete one scored challenge run to start tracking progress.

0% Starter

Recent Scores

No recent score yet. Your finished challenge runs will appear here.

Press Challenge to start a scored run.

Fingering --
Heard -- --

Next step

After leaks improve, the next challenge is keeping the transitions themselves stable.

How to stabilize note changes