Chords in the Key of Gb
The seven diatonic chords of Gb Major, with Roman numerals and common progressions.
Diatonic Chords in Gb Major
Common Progressions in Gb Major
The Chords in Gb Major
The key of Gb Major contains seven diatonic chords. The three major chords are Gb, Cb, Db. These are the I, IV, and V chords — the backbone of most chord progressions in this key. The three minor chords are Abm, Bbm, Ebm, and the seventh degree is Fdim, which is rarely used as a standalone chord but appears in passing progressions and jazz harmony.
Common Chord Progressions in Gb Major
The most popular progression in Gb Major is I–V–vi–IV: Gb, Db, Ebm, Cb. This progression is the foundation of hundreds of popular songs across rock, pop, folk, and country. The I chord (Gb) is the tonal centre; the V chord (Db) creates tension that resolves back to I; and the IV chord (Cb) adds movement and contrast. Knowing these three chords alone is enough to play a large portion of songs written in Gb Major.
Browse chord progressions by genre and mood — or use the chord progression generator to get progressions in Gb Major instantly.
Gb Major on Guitar
Gb 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 Gb 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 for Gb Major to find a comfortable capo position that lets you play easier shapes while still sounding in Gb Major. To work with these chords in a key-agnostic way, see our Nashville Number System chart for Gb Major — the same chords expressed as numbers that work in any key without rewriting.
Ready to write in Gb Major? Drag these chords onto your lyrics in Chordly.
Drag and drop chords directly onto your lyrics, build guitar tabs, and practice hands-free with autoscroll Play Mode. All in your browser — no download needed.