D Chromatic Scale

All 12 notes from D to D — every fret on every string is a scale tone, one half step at a time. Tap any note on the fretboard to hear it played.

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Practice Tips

Tips for Learning the D Chromatic Scale on Guitar

Every fret is a scale tone

The chromatic scale contains all 12 notes, so the whole fretboard above is lit up — there are no wrong frets. What gives the scale its identity is where you start and end: begin and resolve on D and the run sounds rooted rather than random.

Anchor the root D

In standard tuning D sits at the open D string, fret 10 on the low E string, fret 5 on the A string, and fret 3 on the B string. Start and end your runs on one of those anchors so your ear always knows where home is.

The 1-2-3-4 warm-up

Place your first finger at fret 10 on the low E string (the note D) and play four frets in a row — 10, 11, 12, 13 — with fingers 1-2-3-4. Or run the whole octave up the D string, from open D to fret 12.

One finger per fret, then shift

Assign fingers 1–4 to four neighbouring frets and keep each finger to its own fret. To cover more than four half steps, shift the whole hand up one fret rather than stretching — clean position shifts are half of what this exercise teaches.

Sharps up, flats down

Convention spells the chromatic scale with sharps ascending (D, D#, E…) and flats descending. Naming the notes out loud both ways as you play is a fretboard-memorisation exercise hiding inside a finger exercise.

Drone the open D string

Let the open D string ring while you walk the chromatic scale up the A string from fret 5 (D). Hearing each half step rub against the drone teaches your ear what every interval sounds like — there is no better one-string ear-training drill.

About this tool

About the D Chromatic Scale

The D chromatic scale is all 12 notes of Western music — D – D# – E – F – F# – G – G# – A – A# – B – C – C# — played in order, one half step (one fret) at a time. Starting it from D gives you an open-string anchor: the open D string is the root, so you can run the full octave up one string — open to fret 12 — and watch the half-step layout of the neck. Because every pitch is included, the chromatic scale is less an improvising scale than the master map the other scales are carved from: on guitar it is the standard warm-up and finger-independence exercise, the fastest route to memorising the fretboard, and the source of the chromatic passing tones that give jazz and blues lines their slippery motion.

  • 01Notes: D – D# – E – F – F# – G – G# – A – A# – B – C – C#
  • 02Intervals: H × 12 — one half step (one fret) between every note
  • 03Contains all 12 pitches — every other scale is a subset of it
  • 04Perfectly symmetrical: one set of notes, 12 possible starting points
  • 05Root anchors in standard tuning: the open D string, fret 10 on the low E string, fret 5 on the A string, and fret 3 on the B string
  • 06Spelled with sharps ascending and flats descending
  • 07The standard guitar warm-up and finger-independence exercise (1-2-3-4)
Scale Tones

D Chromatic — note by note

The chromatic scale is every one of the 12 notes, each one half step (one fret) above the last — nothing is skipped, so the formula is simply twelve half steps in a row. Ascending it is conventionally spelled with sharps, descending with flats.

DegreeNoteRoleInterval (from root)
1DRoot (tonic)Unison (0 st)
♭2D# / EbMinor second+1 semitone
2EMajor second+2 semitones
♭3FMinor third+3 semitones
3F# / GbMajor third+4 semitones
4GPerfect fourth+5 semitones
♭5G# / AbTritone (♯4 / ♭5)+6 semitones
5APerfect fifth+7 semitones
♭6A# / BbMinor sixth+8 semitones
6BMajor sixth+9 semitones
♭7CMinor seventh+10 semitones
7C# / DbMajor seventh+11 semitones
Questions

Frequently Asked Questions