20 Common Crochet Mistakes and How to Fix Them: Expert Solutions

📅 Last updated: February 2026
Sarah Mitchell
CYC Certified Instructor

Every mistake on this list is one I have either made myself or diagnosed in hundreds of students. There are no silly questions in crochet, only learning opportunities.

✅ Fact-Checked
🎯 Key Takeaway: The 3 most common crochet mistakes: (1) miscounting stitches (fix: use stitch markers every 10-20 stitches), (2) inconsistent tension (fix: practice and use the pencil grip), (3) skipping the first or last stitch of a row (fix: mark the first stitch of every row). These three account for 70% of all beginner frustrations.

Every crocheter makes mistakes, and I say that as someone who has been crocheting for over 20 years and still occasionally miscounts a stitch. The difference between a frustrated beginner and a confident crocheter is not the absence of mistakes but the ability to identify and fix them quickly. This guide covers the 20 mistakes I see most frequently in my classes and online communities, along with the exact fix for each one.

I organized these from most common to least common based on my experience teaching thousands of students. If you are struggling with any aspect of crochet, chances are your issue is on this list.

Top 20 Mistakes and Fixes

#MistakeFixFrequency
1Miscounting stitchesUse stitch markers every 10-20 stitchesVery common
2Inconsistent tensionPractice consistent yarn wrap, use pencil gripVery common
3Skipping first/last stitchMark the turning chain and first stitchVery common
4Working into turning chainCount the turning chain as a stitch OR not, consistentlyCommon
5Row width changingCount stitches at end of every rowCommon
6Twisted foundation chainCount chain stitches before joining roundsCommon
7Too-tight foundation chainUse a hook 1-2 sizes larger for chain onlyCommon
8Splitting yarnUse a hook with a rounder tip, insert under both loopsModerate
9Curling edgesBlock the finished piece, or add a borderModerate
10Not making a gauge swatchAlways swatch for garments; adjust hook sizeVery common
11Ignoring yarn labelsRead and photograph every labelCommon
12Wrong yarn for projectMatch fiber to use case (see our guides)Moderate
13Not weaving in ends properlyWeave through 2-3 inches in different directionsCommon
14Frogging too aggressivelyPull slowly, use a smaller hook to pick up live loopModerate
15Wrong stitch heightLearn the 4 main stitch heights and their chainsModerate
16Crocheting too tightlyRelax hands, use larger hook, take breaksCommon
17Not counting rowsUse a row counter or tally marks on paperModerate
18Different dye lotsBuy all yarn at once, check lot numbersModerate
19Skipping blockingBlock every garment and blanket pieceVery common
20Not reading full pattern firstRead entire pattern before startingVery common

The Big Three: Deep Dive

Mistake #1: Miscounting Stitches

This is the number one problem for everyone, beginners and experienced crocheters alike. The fix is simple but requires discipline: use stitch markers. Place a marker in the first stitch of every row and every 10-20 stitches along the row. Count your stitches at the end of every single row until counting becomes automatic. Yes, it slows you down initially, but it saves enormous time compared to frogging 15 rows because you lost a stitch back on row 3.

Mistake #2: Inconsistent Tension

Tension varies with mood, fatigue, and hand position. Crochet done while anxious or hurried tends to be tight. Relaxed evening crocheting tends to be loose. The key is awareness: notice when your tension changes and adjust your grip accordingly. The pencil grip (holding the hook like a pencil) provides more consistent control than the knife grip for most people. See our Tension Guide for detailed techniques.

Mistake #3: Losing the First or Last Stitch

This causes triangular fabric that gets wider or narrower with each row. The fix: decide whether your turning chain counts as the first stitch of the row (yes for dc, typically no for sc). Mark the turning chain with a stitch marker if it counts. At the end of the row, make sure you work into the turning chain of the previous row (or the actual last stitch, depending on your choice).

💡 The Frog Stitch "Frogging" means ripping out stitches (rip-it, rip-it, like a frog). When you need to frog, pull your hook out, pull the yarn slowly and steadily, and stop 1-2 rows before where the mistake was. Reinsert your hook carefully into the live loop and work forward again. Do not try to frog and re-crochet at full speed; careful frogging prevents accidental splitting and additional mistakes.

Sources

  1. Crochet Guild of America — Troubleshooting Guide
  2. Craft Yarn Council — Common Errors Reference
  3. Debbie Stoller — Stitch n Bitch Crochet (Workman Publishing)