Guitar chord chart covering chord types from the Suspended family, featuring movable shapes in root position with multiple voicings for each type, shown with scale degrees.
All chords share a common foundation—each omits the 3rd and replaces it with either a 4th or a 2nd, forming sus4 or sus2 voicings respectively. This removes the major/minor distinction, giving the chords a more neutral, open sound.
Since there are many chords in this family, I've organized them in a meaningful way so you can easily understand which subcategory they belong to, refer to them collectively, and quickly grasp their purpose and use. Each chart groups chords that share something in common, which is reflected in the title of the page.
| ▼ Suspended Chords | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Symbol | Name | Scale Degrees | Other Symbols |
| sus4 | Sus4 | 1-4-5 | sus |
| sus2 | Sus2 | 1-2-5 | |
Note: You can find a reference for chord intervals and scale degrees at the bottom of this page (expand the "Show More" section).
Click the button below to expand and learn more about the following topics:
Dashed notes indicate optional tones that can be omitted without affecting the chord's function or core sound. These are either tones duplicated in another octave, non-guide tones, or non-primary color tones.
I recommend playing the chord without them first and really listening to how it sounds, then adding them only if you like what you hear and they serve the sound you're going for.
Why I introduced them?
Here are some scenarios where you might choose to include them or leave them out—these aren't pros and cons, just different situations you might find yourself in.
Scenarios when you would want to include:
Scenarios when you would not want to include:
Another goal I aimed for with these optional notes was practicality—you can add any of them without changing your hand position or rearranging your fingers. If a shape includes an optional note, it means you either have a free finger available to fret it, or you can easily bring it in with a simple barre.
The handy table below shows the chord extension depth, how each level can be modified, and the symbols used for each alteration.
Note that these are not scale degrees, but chord notation as used in chord symbols such as 7sus4 or maj7#11. For example, the symbol "7" here represents a minor 7th interval, whereas as a scale degree it would correspond to a major 7th.
The "Dominant" column shows a full stack of thirds that forms an extended dominant chord reaching all the way up to the 13th. It serves as our reference point. When you raise or lower any of these tones, that alteration gets a symbol which you can see to the left and right of this column.
Just to clarify: this chart itself isn't specifically about dominant chord alterations—it applies to all chord types. It's just that the unaltered symbols (1,3,5,7, etc.) define the dominant chord structure and serve as the baseline.
Think of the leftmost column as the extension level (or depth).
| -2 tones | -1 tone | Dominant | +1 tone | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Root | 1 | |||
| Third | sus2 | m3 | 3 | sus4 |
| Fifth | b5 | 5 | #5 | |
| Seventh | b6 | dim7 or 6 | 7 | maj7 |
| Ninth | b9 | 9 | #9 | |
| Eleventh | 11 | #11 | ||
| Thirteenth | b13 | 13 |
| Scale Degree | Interval Name | Short Name | Half-Steps |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Perfect unison | P1 | 0 half-steps |
| b2 | Minor second | m2 | 1 half-step |
| 2 | Major second | M2 | 2 half-steps |
| b3 | Minor third | m3 | 3 half-steps |
| 3 | Major third | M3 | 4 half-steps |
| 4 | Perfect fourth | P4 | 5 half-steps |
| b5 | Diminished fifth | d5 | 6 half-steps |
| 5 | Perfect fifth | P5 | 7 half-steps |
| b6 | Minor sixth | m6 | 8 half-steps |
| 6 | Major sixth | M6 | 9 half-steps |
| b7 | Minor seventh | m7 | 10 half-steps |
| 7 | Major seventh | M7 | 11 half-steps |
You've just downloaded a so-called .zip archive file. It's a way of conveniently distributing multiple files so you didn't have to download one by one. It contains several files inside but to view its content you need to extract (unzip) it.
Every modern operating system comes with a program that is capable of unpacking such archive files so you don't have to download, install and even open any additional software. Click on the downloaded file to invoke its context menu and look for Extract option. Click that and all files which reside in the zip file will be unarchived into a single directory to your device. Navigate to the extracted folder and look for the poster PDF.
Should you need any assistance with opening the file contact me and I will gladly help you out.
| Poster type | electronic |
|---|---|
| Poster language | English |
| Paper size format | A4 (ISO 216) |
| Poster, printable PDF | 1 pc |
|---|---|
| Poster, grayscale (B/W), printable PDF | 1 pc |
| Date added | April 18, 2026 |
|---|---|
| Version | 1.0 |
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