C Major Scale

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7 NotesDiatonic

The first scale every guitarist learns — bright, open, and all-natural. Tap any note on the fretboard to hear it played.

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Settings

Tips for Learning the C Major Scale on Guitar

Start with the open position

The C major scale in open position (frets 0–3) uses no barre chords and covers the most common guitar voicings. Master this position before moving up the neck.

Link the CAGED positions

C major has a pattern in every CAGED position. Once you can play two adjacent positions, connect them by finding the shared notes at the boundary frets.

Use the root note as your anchor

C appears on string 5 fret 3, string 2 fret 1, and string 1 fret 8. Return to them whenever you feel lost.

Play along with a drone

Sustain a C note (or a C power chord) and improvise over it using only the scale notes. Your ear will quickly learn which notes sound "home" and which create tension.

Practise all seven modes

C major shares the same notes as D Dorian, E Phrygian, F Lydian, G Mixolydian, A natural minor (Aeolian), and B Locrian. Playing C major up from each of those roots gives you seven distinct sounds.

Memorise intervals, not just shapes

Count the frets: whole–whole–half–whole–whole–whole–half (W W H W W W H). Once that pattern is in your fingers, you can build a major scale from any root without memorising a new shape.

About this tool

About the C Major Scale

The C major scale is the foundational scale of Western music — seven notes (C D E F G A B), no sharps, no flats, and a bright, resolved sound that defines the "do re mi" of tonal harmony. On guitar it sits perfectly in both open position and in the standard CAGED box shapes, making it the go-to first scale for beginners and an indispensable reference for advanced players mapping out the neck.

  • 01Notes: C – D – E – F – G – A – B
  • 02Intervals: W – W – H – W – W – W – H
  • 03No sharps or flats — the "white keys" scale
  • 04Relative minor: A natural minor (same notes)
  • 05Parent scale for all 7 diatonic modes
  • 06Used in countless pop, rock, folk, and classical pieces
  • 07Maps cleanly to open-position guitar

Scale Tones — C Major

Every C Major scale follows this same formula — root, then ascending by the major scale interval pattern (W–W–H–W–W–W–H).

DegreeNoteRoleInterval
1CRoot (tonic)Unison (0 st)
2DMajor second+2 semitones
3EMajor third+4 semitones
4FPerfect fourth+5 semitones
5GPerfect fifth+7 semitones
6AMajor sixth+9 semitones
7BMajor seventh+11 semitones

Frequently Asked Questions