Chord shapes

A chord finder

Change chords fast with the field below.

Chord diagram

Shape 1 of 2

Open A shape · Frets 0-2

A

123
B
G
D
Related chords

Shape difficulty

Beginner-friendly

Main challenge: Keeping adjacent strings clear when several fretted notes sit tightly together on the same fret.

Chord tones

Root notes stay highlighted so the voicing reads faster at a glance.

A1E5C♯3
RootChord tone

By root

A Guitar Chords

Compare common A chords, hear how their notes change, and move to related scales when you want more context.

A makes more sense when you hear the plain major and minor sounds beside their seventh, suspended, and added-tone colors.

Common A chords

A

A Major

a bright, stable, foundational sound. beginner songs, pop, folk, country, worship, and the I, IV, and V chords behind countless progressions.

Notes: A, C♯, and E

Am

A Minor

a darker, moodier sound than a major triad. minor-key songs, ballads, indie progressions, cinematic writing, and any harmony that needs a darker contrast.

Notes: A, C, and E

A7

A7

a tense, bluesy, forward-leaning sound. blues, folk turnarounds, rock cadences, and any progression that needs a clear pull into the next chord.

Notes: A, C♯, E, and G

A7sus4

A7sus4

a suspended dominant sound with forward pull. rock turnarounds, worship progressions, bluesy cadences, and dominant moments that want tension without a plain major third.

Notes: A, D, E, and G

Amaj7

A Major 7

a smooth, lush major sound. jazz-influenced pop, neo-soul, ballads, and smoother tonic or subdominant harmony.

Notes: A, C♯, E, and G♯

Am7

A Minor 7

a mellow, soulful, more relaxed minor sound. jazz, soul, funk, mellow pop, neo-soul, and softer minor-key progressions.

Notes: A, C, E, and G

Adim

A Diminished

a tight, tense, unstable sound. leading-tone harmony, passing chords, and tighter tension points in both major and minor progressions.

Notes: A, C, and E♭

Aaug

A Augmented

a bright but unsettled sound. passing harmony, dramatic songwriting turns, and color-chord moments where a plain major triad feels too settled.

Notes: A, C♯, and E♯

A6

A6

a warm major sound with a little extra motion. older pop, swing-flavored rhythm work, warmer tonic harmony, and arranged parts that want motion without a seventh chord.

Notes: A, C♯, E, and F♯

Am6

A Minor 6

a minor sound with an added lift. jazzier minor-key writing, arranged rhythm parts, and progressions that want more motion than a plain minor chord.

Notes: A, C, E, and F♯

Aadd9

A Add 9

an open, airy major sound. acoustic pop, worship, singer-songwriter arrangements, and other progressions that want a wider top end.

Notes: A, C♯, E, and B

A9

A9

a bluesy dominant sound with extra color. blues, funk, soul, and richer dominant grooves where a plain 7 chord needs more color.

Notes: A, C♯, E, G, and B

Asus2

A Sus2

an open, suspended sound. acoustic strumming, pop hooks, singer-songwriter progressions, and repeated patterns that need motion without extra harmonic complexity.

Notes: A, B, and E

Asus4

A Sus4

a suspended, pushing, unresolved sound. rock, pop, worship, and singer-songwriter strumming patterns where tension and release happen around one root sound.

Notes: A, D, and E

A5

A Power

a punchy, direct, neutral guitar sound. rock riffs, punk, palm-muted rhythm parts, and higher-gain playing where full triads can sound too busy.

Notes: A and E