A Suspended 4th Guitar Chord

All positions and voicings on the fretboard

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A Suspended 4th filtered by fret:

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A Suspended 4th — chord details

The A Suspended 4th chord is made up of the following notes: A, D, E.

Intervals: 1P, 4P, 5P.

The diagrams above show every voicing and chord variation for A Suspended 4th on guitar. Use the fret filter to narrow down voicings within a specific fret range — ideal for finding close-proximity chords when composing or arranging.

A sus4 replaces the third with a perfect fourth, producing the notes A, D, E (intervals 1P, 4P, 5P). Without the third, the chord is neither major nor minor — just open tension waiting to resolve. Suspended fourth chords create a yearning, unfinished quality that has been exploited brilliantly in folk, rock, and ambient music. They often resolve down to the major chord, providing a satisfying release.

How to Play A Suspended 4th

On guitar, the most common voicing for A sus4 is x-0-2-2-3-0 — open position that raises the 3rd of A major to create a suspended tension. This is one of the fundamental shapes every guitarist should memorize early on, as it appears in countless songs and serves as a building block for more complex voicings up the neck.

A Suspended 4th in Progressions

A sus4 is used wherever you want tension without committing to major or minor. It commonly replaces or precedes the A major chord, creating a sus4-to-major resolution. In modern music, sus chords often stand on their own as ambient, open-sounding harmonies.

Common Substitutions

A major, Dadd9, or A7sus4 offer different resolutions of the suspended tension.

Difficulty: On guitar, this chord has a comfortable open voicing — suitable for beginners and widely used in popular songs.

Explore A Suspended 4th Further

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