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D Major 7th Guitar Chord (Dmaj7)

D major 7th is a four-note chord built from D (the root), F♯ (the major third), A (the perfect fifth), and C♯ (the major seventh). It is what you reach for when a plain D major is too plain — the same brightness, but with a soft-focus, jazzy glow layered on top. Below are 4 ways to play it in standard tuning, easiest shape first.

Dmaj7 chord shapes — standard tuning

open string × muted / not played 1–4 suggested finger 3fr shape starts at fret 3 R · 3 · 5 · ♭7 chord tone each string sounds
Dmaj7 guitar chord diagram, Open position, frets x-x-0-2-2-2××R152733
Open position
x-x-0-2-2-2
Dmaj7 guitar chord diagram, Barre · 5fr, frets x-5-7-6-7-55fr×1R3527435
Barre · 5fr
x-5-7-6-7-5
Dmaj7 guitar chord diagram, Barre · 7fr, frets 10-9-7-7-7-97fr4R2315R337
Barre · 7fr
10-9-7-7-7-9
Dmaj7 guitar chord diagram, Barre · 10fr, frets 10-12-11-11-10-1010fr1R4527335R
Barre · 10fr
10-12-11-11-10-10

How to play it

Place your index finger on the G (3rd) string at fret 2, your middle finger on the B (2nd) string at fret 2, and your ring finger on the high E (1st) string at fret 2. Let the D (4th) string ring open. Keep the low E (6th) and A (5th) strings out of the strum — start your downstroke from the D (4th) string.

Once that shape is comfortable, try the other 3 voicings above — same notes, different neck positions and textures.

Notes in this chord

SymbolIntervalNote
RrootD
3major thirdF♯
5perfect fifthA
7major seventhC♯

Dmaj7 FAQ

What notes are in Dmaj7?
Dmaj7 contains D, F♯, A, and C♯ — the root (D), the major third, the perfect fifth, and the major seventh.

Is Dmaj7 a barre chord?
Not necessarily. The easiest Dmaj7 shape (x-x-0-2-2-2) needs no barre — it uses 3 fingers plus open strings. Barre versions exist too, starting at fret 5, and are handy when you want to move the same grip to other keys.

What is the easiest way to play Dmaj7 on guitar?
Start with the open position shape x-x-0-2-2-2. Place your index finger on the G (3rd) string at fret 2, your middle finger on the B (2nd) string at fret 2, and your ring finger on the high E (1st) string at fret 2. Let the D (4th) string ring open. Keep the low E (6th) and A (5th) strings out of the strum — start your downstroke from the D (4th) string.