Standard left-handed chord chart

D5 Left-Handed Guitar Chord Chart

Power chord voicings, mirrored lefty grip charts and standard tab references in Standard.

D5 uses the notes D, A and is shown here as a mirrored left-handed chord chart. Standard tuning keeps the usual string relationships intact, so it is the easiest place to compare left-handed charts with mainstream tab and lesson content. Left-handed rhythm players usually want the visual reference on the bass side first, which is why the chart keeps the low strings on the right.

Open a page

Chord boxes are mirrored for left-handed guitar. Tab and low-to-high shape notation remain standard so common lessons still translate.

Formula 1 5
Tuning E B G D A E
Voicings 4 shapes
Mirror View True lefty chart

Primary Chart

Chord View

x
 
 
o
x
x
1
2
A
3
D
4
5
E
B
G
D
A
E

Power open-position chart (frets 1-5)

x
 
 
o
o
x
1
2
A
3
D
4
5
E
B
G
D
A
E

Power open-position chart (frets 1-5)

5fr
 
x
 
 
 
x
5
A
D
6
7
D
A
8
9
E
B
G
D
A
E

Power voicing around frets 5-9

10fr
 
 
x
 
 
 
10
D
A
D
11
12
D
A
13
14
E
B
G
D
A
E

Power voicing around frets 10-14

Standard Reference

Tab & Shape Readout

Standard Tab Reference

Left-handed shape (high -> low): x 3 2 0 x x
Chord tones: D A

E|-x-|
B|-3-|
G|-2-|
D|-0-|
A|-x-|
E|-x-|

Mirrored left-handed chord box on top, stacked standard tab reference below.

Standard Tab Reference

Left-handed shape (high -> low): x 3 2 0 0 x
Chord tones: D A

E|-x-|
B|-3-|
G|-2-|
D|-0-|
A|-0-|
E|-x-|

Mirrored left-handed chord box on top, stacked standard tab reference below.

Standard Tab Reference

Left-handed shape (high -> low): 5 x 7 7 5 x
Chord tones: D A

E|-5-|
B|-x-|
G|-7-|
D|-7-|
A|-5-|
E|-x-|

Mirrored left-handed chord box on top, stacked standard tab reference below.

Standard Tab Reference

Left-handed shape (high -> low): 10 10 x 12 12 10
Chord tones: D A

E|-10-|
B|-10-|
G|-x--|
D|-12-|
A|-12-|
E|-10-|

Mirrored left-handed chord box on top, stacked standard tab reference below.

Context

How To Use This Page

Overview

Power feels lean, strong and aggressive and works for rock rhythm guitar, punk, heavy riffs and quick key changes.

Lefty Translation

Left-handed rhythm players usually want the visual reference on the bass side first, which is why the chart keeps the low strings on the right.

Grip Cue

Use the mirrored chart to keep the root on the correct bass-side string so palm muting and downstrokes line up cleanly

Tuning Context

Standard feels balanced, familiar and easy to compare with lesson material. It lets you focus on left-handed visual translation without also learning a new tuning layout.

Chord Tones
  • D
  • A

Next Step

Matching Left-Handed Scales

Use these scale pages to move from the chord into lead work without leaving the same tuning and key centre.

Library

Explore More Left-Handed Resources