Drop D left-handed chord chart
G#sus2 Left-Handed Guitar Chord Chart
Sus2 chord voicings, mirrored lefty grip charts and standard tab references in Drop D.
G#sus2 uses the notes G#, A#, D# and is shown here as a mirrored left-handed chord chart. Drop D leaves most of the neck familiar but changes the bass side immediately, which is especially relevant for left-handed players who use mirrored rhythm charts. These shapes can be visually deceptive in right-handed charts because the intervals look so open; the mirrored lefty version solves that quickly.
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.
Primary Chart
Chord View
Sus2 voicing around frets 3-7
Sus2 voicing around frets 6-10
Sus2 voicing around frets 11-15
Sus2 open-position chart (frets 1-5)
Standard Reference
Tab & Shape Readout
Standard Tab Reference
Left-handed shape (high -> low): 4 4 3 6 6 6 Chord tones: G# A# D# E|-4-| B|-4-| G|-3-| D|-6-| A|-6-| D|-6-|
Mirrored left-handed chord box on top, stacked standard tab reference below.
Standard Tab Reference
Left-handed shape (high -> low): 6 x x 6 6 6 Chord tones: G# A# D# E|-6-| B|-x-| G|-x-| D|-6-| A|-6-| D|-6-|
Mirrored left-handed chord box on top, stacked standard tab reference below.
Standard Tab Reference
Left-handed shape (high -> low): 11 11 13 13 11 x Chord tones: G# A# D# E|-11-| B|-11-| G|-13-| D|-13-| A|-11-| D|-x--|
Mirrored left-handed chord box on top, stacked standard tab reference below.
Standard Tab Reference
Left-handed shape (high -> low): x x 1 1 1 1 Chord tones: G# A# D# E|-x-| B|-x-| G|-1-| D|-1-| A|-1-| D|-1-|
Mirrored left-handed chord box on top, stacked standard tab reference below.
Context
How To Use This Page
Sus2 feels open, modern and airy and works for pop rhythm guitar, drone-based accompaniment and layered acoustic parts.
These shapes can be visually deceptive in right-handed charts because the intervals look so open; the mirrored lefty version solves that quickly.
Listen for the major second against the root and avoid pressing so hard that the voicing sounds stiff
Drop D feels heavier on the low end while staying familiar on the top five strings. It makes low-string riffs and one-finger power movement faster to understand in left-handed view.
- G#
- A#
- D#
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