Gm/D Guitar Chord

Gm/D is the second inversion of Gm, built from D, G, Bb with D as the lowest sounding note. It contains the same pitches as Gm. The slash notation specifies that D sounds in the bass instead of the root. It places the open D string as the bass note under G minor, creating a resonant open-string voicing. The D bass connects naturally to C major (D(50) stepping down to C(48)) or holds as a pedal tone while the harmony floats above it in folk, classical, and soul progressions.

4 ways to play Gm/D

Open
343Fret 3
2343Fret 3
3425Fret 5

Notes

DGBb

Intervals

D (Bass Note), G (Chord Tone), Bb (Chord Tone)

Notes in the Gm/D Chord

Gm/D is the second inversion of Gm. It contains 3 notes: D, G, Bb. These are the same pitches as Gm, but with D as the lowest sounding note. Because the notes are identical to Gm, Gm/D carries the same harmonic colour. The distinction lies in the bass: changing which note sits lowest reshapes the voicing and enables smoother bass-line movement between chords.

What Does Gm/D Mean?

In chord notation, a slash chord is written as Chord/Bass — the letter before the slash is the chord to play, and the letter after the slash is the specific note that should sound as the lowest pitch. For Gm/D, this means: play Gm with D in the bass.

Because D is the fifth of Gm, Gm/D is specifically called the second inversion of Gm. An inversion does not change the notes in the chord. It only changes which note sits at the bottom, which affects how the chord sounds in context and how smoothly it connects to the chords around it.

Guitarists use slash chords primarily for smooth bass-line movement. Instead of the bass jumping from root to root between chords, a well-placed slash chord creates a stepwise (scale-like) bass line that makes a progression feel connected and natural. This technique is borrowed from classical voice leading and is used across every genre of modern music.

Keys That Contain Gm/D

Gm (the chord above the slash) is a diatonic chord in these keys. Gm/D can be used in any context where Gm naturally appears:

Common Uses of Gm/D in Progressions

Gm/D is most often used as a passing chord rather than an opening or closing chord. It appears between root-position chords to create a stepwise bass line:

Dm → Gm/D → CD bass holds through Dm and Gm/D before stepping down to C(48)
C → Gm/D → DBass rises from C(48) to D(50) with Gm/D and holds through D major
F → Gm/D → CBass rises from F(41) to D(50) under Gm/D then steps to C(48)

Use our chords in a key tool to find all the chords that naturally appear alongside Gm in any key.

Frequently Asked Questions

What does Gm/D mean?

Gm/D is a slash chord — it means: play Gm with D as the lowest note. The letter before the slash (Gm) is the chord quality, and the letter after the slash (D) is the bass note. Gm/D is the second inversion of Gm.

Is Gm/D the same as Gm?

Gm/D and Gm contain exactly the same notes: D, G, Bb. The difference is which note sounds lowest. In Gm, the root (G) is in the bass. In Gm/D, D is in the bass instead. This creates a different voicing and a smoother bass line in progressions.

How do you play Gm/D on guitar?

Place your fingers according to the chord diagram above. The goal is to ensure D sounds as the lowest note — on guitar this typically means either playing D on the lowest string used, or muting any lower strings that don't contribute to the voicing. The "X" symbols in the diagram show which strings to mute.

What key is Gm/D in?

Gm/D appears in the same keys as Gm: Eb Major, Bb Major, F Major. It functions as an inversion of Gm within those keys rather than as a separate chord — it shares the same harmonic function, just with a different bass note.

Other G Chords

Write chord sheets with Gm/D in Chordly — click any chord to add it to your lyrics, then share or export.

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.

Start for FreeNo credit card required.
chordly.com