Chords in the Key of E

The seven diatonic chords of E Major, with Roman numerals and common progressions.

Diatonic Chords in E Major

I
E
maj
ii
F#m
min
iii
G#m
min
IV
A
maj
V
B
maj
vi
C#m
min
vii°
D#dim
dim

Common Progressions in E Major

I–V–vi–IV
EBC#mA
I–IV–V
EAB
ii–V–I
F#mBE
I–vi–IV–V
EC#mAB

The Chords in E Major

The key of E Major contains seven diatonic chords: E, F#m, G#m, A, B, C#m, D#dim. The three major chords are E, A, B. These are the I, IV, and V chords, the backbone of most chord progressions in this key. The three minor chords are F#m, G#m, C#m, and the seventh degree is D#dim, which is rarely used as a standalone chord but appears in passing progressions and jazz harmony.

Common Chord Progressions in E Major

The most popular progression in E Major is I–V–vi–IV: E, B, C#m, A. This progression is the foundation of hundreds of popular songs across rock, pop, folk, and country. The I chord (E) is the tonal centre; the V chord (B) creates tension that resolves back to I; and the IV chord (A) adds movement and contrast. Knowing these three chords alone is enough to play a large portion of songs written in E Major.

E Major on Guitar

E Major is one of the most guitar-friendly keys. Most of its diatonic chords can be played as open chord shapes or straightforward barre chords. Guitarists playing in E Major often use open voicings for a full, resonant sound, or move up the neck for a brighter tone. If the chords are too challenging in this key, use our capo chart to find a comfortable capo position that lets you play easier shapes while still sounding in E Major.

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