A Major Scale Guitar
All positions of the A major scale across the guitar fretboard.
Scale type
Root key
Standard tuning — E A D G B e (low to high)
The A Major Scale
The A major scale contains 7 notes: A, B, C#, D, E, F#, G#. The root note is A, which is the tonal center of the scale — phrases resolve back to A, and the scale sounds “at home” when played over chords that emphasize A. The foundation of Western music — bright, resolved, and widely used across every genre. Use the interactive fretboard above to see where every A major scale note appears across all 6 strings.
Playing the A Major Scale on Guitar
The fretboard map shows all positions simultaneously, but most guitarists learn scales in positional patterns — groups of notes reachable without moving the fretting hand. Start by finding a root note (A) on the low E or A string and play through the highlighted scale notes moving up from there. The pattern repeats every 12 frets and appears multiple times across all 6 strings. As you get comfortable with one position, use the diagram to connect it to the neighboring positions up and down the neck.
A Major and Related Tools
To find the chords that work over A major progressions, use the Chords in a Key tool. To understand where all notes live on the neck (not just scale notes), visit the Guitar Fretboard map. If you need to play these patterns in a different key without changing your fingering, the Guitar Capo Chart shows which capo position transposes your shapes to the target key.
Major Scale in Other Keys
Writing in A Major? Build the chord sheet 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.
