Major Pentatonic Scales Guitar

All 12 major pentatonic scales on guitar — see the notes for every key, with a full fretboard visualizer, audio, and box positions on each scale's page.

12 ScalesAudio + CAGEDFree

ANATOMY

Major Pentatonic Scale Formula

The 5 scale degrees that build every major pentatonic scale — in any key.

Step pattern:1 – 2 – 3 – 5 – 6
1
Root0 st
2
Major 2nd+2 st
3
Major 3rd+4 st
5
Perfect 5th+7 st
6
Major 6th+9 st

The major pentatonic is the major scale with two notes removed — the 4th and the 7th. That leaves five notes (degrees 1, 2, 3, 5, 6) and, crucially, no half-steps. With no adjacent semitones there are no "avoid notes": every tone is consonant over the I chord, which is exactly why the pentatonic is the safest scale for beginners to improvise with.

Applied to C: C – D – E – G – A (drop the F and B from C major). Applied to G: G – A – B – D – E (drop the C and F#). Applied to A: A – B – C# – E – F# (drop the D and G#).

About this tool

About Major Pentatonic Scales on Guitar

The major pentatonic scale is the five-note backbone of melodic guitar playing. Take any major scale, remove the 4th and 7th degrees, and you are left with five notes that contain no half-steps and no clashing tones — a scale that sounds resolved over almost any major-key backing. On guitar it maps onto the neck in five overlapping box shapes, and because it shares its notes with the relative minor pentatonic (C major pentatonic = A minor pentatonic), learning one box quietly teaches you two scales at once. It is the foundation of country, folk, pop, and the bright side of blues and rock soloing.

  • 01Built from 5 notes — scale degrees 1, 2, 3, 5, 6 of the major scale
  • 02Formed by removing the 4th and 7th from the major scale
  • 03Contains no half-steps, so every note is consonant
  • 04Bright, open, beginner-safe "no wrong notes" sound
  • 05Maps onto the guitar fretboard in 5 overlapping box positions
  • 06Shares its notes with the relative minor pentatonic
  • 0712 unique major pentatonic scales cover every possible root note
Questions

Frequently Asked Questions