Once you’ve got one bar chord down, you’ve actually got twelve. The magic of moveable bar chords is that they work anywhere on the neck — same shape, different fret, different chord.

But to take advantage of that, you need to know where you’re going.

Know Your Notes on the 6th String

For E-shape bar chords (the ones based on E major or E minor), your root note sits on the 6th string. That means you need to know what note you’re landing on.

Here’s the 6th string, fret by fret:

  • Open: E
  • 1st fret: F
  • 2nd fret: F# / Gb
  • 3rd fret: G
  • 4th fret: G# / Ab
  • 5th fret: A
  • 6th fret: A# / Bb
  • 7th fret: B
  • 8th fret: C
  • 9th fret: C# / Db
  • 10th fret: D
  • 11th fret: D# / Eb
  • 12th fret: E (octave)

So if you want F major, you bar at the 1st fret. G major? 3rd fret. A major? 5th fret.

Tones and Semitones

You need to understand the spacing between notes to navigate quickly:

A semitone (half step) is one fret. A tone (whole step) is two frets.

Between most notes, there’s a tone: F to G is a tone (two frets). G to A is a tone. A to B is a tone.

But there are two exceptions: B to C is a semitone (one fret), and E to F is a semitone.

Once you internalize this pattern, you can find any chord without memorizing every fret. That’s what makes moveable bar chords so powerful — learn the pattern once, use it everywhere.

Major vs Minor — Same Fret Rules

The fret positions work the same whether you’re playing major or minor. The only difference is the shape.

F Major134211
F Minor134111

Both are at the 1st fret. F major uses the E major shape. F minor uses the E minor shape. Same root position, different chord quality.

Move them both to the 3rd fret and you’ve got G major and G minor. 5th fret gives you A major and A minor.

The In-Between Chords

What about F# or Bb? Those sit on the frets between the natural notes.

F# major (or Gb major — same thing) is at the 2nd fret. Bb major (or A# major) is at the 6th fret.

If you’ve been avoiding songs in keys like Eb or F#, moveable bar chords make those keys just as easy as C or G. Same shape, different starting point.

Quick Reference

Here’s the full map for E-shape bar chords:

  • 1st fret: F / Fm
  • 2nd fret: F# / F#m (or Gb / Gbm)
  • 3rd fret: G / Gm
  • 4th fret: G# / G#m (or Ab / Abm)
  • 5th fret: A / Am
  • 6th fret: A# / A#m (or Bb / Bbm)
  • 7th fret: B / Bm
  • 8th fret: C / Cm
  • 9th fret: C# / C#m (or Db / Dbm)
  • 10th fret: D / Dm
  • 11th fret: D# / D#m (or Eb / Ebm)
  • 12th fret: E / Em (octave)

Don’t Drag Your Thumb

When moving bar chords, make sure your thumb moves with your hand. Keep it centered behind wherever your bar lands — don’t leave it trailing behind at the old position.

This sounds obvious, but it’s a common mistake that makes transitions feel harder than they need to be.

Putting It Together

Once you can move the shape confidently, you can play in any key. See a chord chart that calls for Bb? No problem — 6th fret, E major shape. Need C#m? 9th fret, E minor shape.

The next step is learning the A-shape bar chords (root on 5th string) so you have options all over the neck. Check out our posts on Bm and B major for those shapes.

For the complete picture on bar chord technique, visit our Bar Chords guide.

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