Chord Transposer

Transpose guitar chord progressions up or down by semitones or to a target key. Choose sharps or flats spelling. Full transposition table in the Professional tier.

Transposed Chords
Original Key
New Key
Extended More scenarios, charts & detailed breakdown
Transposed
New Key
Professional Full parameters & maximum detail

Major Chord Transpositions

C → ?
G → ?
D → ?
A → ?
E → ?
F → ?

Minor Chord Transpositions

Am → ?
Em → ?
Bm → ?

How to Use This Calculator

  1. Select a Chord Progression preset.
  2. Enter the number of Semitones to transpose (positive = up, negative = down).
  3. Choose Sharps or Flats spelling for the output.
  4. Use the To Different Key tab to auto-calculate semitones from one key to another.

Formula

New chord root = (Original root index + semitones + 120) mod 12

C=0, C#=1, D=2, D#=3, E=4, F=5, F#=6, G=7, G#=8, A=9, A#=10, B=11

Example

Transpose C G Am F up 5 semitones: C(0)+5=F(5), G(7)+5=C(0), A(9)+5=D(2)→Dm, F(5)+5=A#/Bb(10). Result: F C Dm Bb.

Frequently Asked Questions

  • Count the semitones between the original root note and the target root note. Apply that same shift to every chord in the progression. For example, C to G = 7 semitones up, so C becomes G, Am becomes Em, F becomes C, G becomes D.
  • Keys with sharps in their signature (G, D, A, E, B, F#) typically use sharp notation. Keys with flats (F, Bb, Eb, Ab, Db, Gb) use flat notation. For example, the note between D and E is D# in G major but Eb in F major.
  • Transposing changes the actual chord names (and requires playing different shapes). A capo transposes the pitch while keeping the same physical shapes — it is a mechanical shortcut that raises all strings equally.
  • C# and Db are the same pitch played on a keyboard, but they have different names depending on context. In music theory, they are called enharmonic equivalents. Our calculator lets you choose which spelling to display.

Related Calculators

Sources & References (5)
  1. Music Theory: Transposition — Berklee Online
  2. Chord Transposition Guide — Music Theory Academy
  3. Hooktheory: Chord Progressions and Keys — Hooktheory
  4. Nashville Number System — Soundslice
  5. Enharmonic Equivalents Explained — Music Theory Academy