Power chords are one of the first things every guitarist wants to learn — and for good reason. They are easy to play, they sound huge, and they work in almost any style of music from rock to punk to metal. In the video above, we break down exactly how to play power chords guitar style, including the correct finger placement, how to move them around the fretboard, and why they work so well even though they are technically not full chords.
If you are just getting started with chords, our beginner chords guide covers all the foundational shapes you need, and power chords are a great place to begin.
What Are Power Chords on Guitar?
A standard chord has at least three distinct notes, but power chords only use two: the root and the fifth. That is why some players call them “cheater chords” — they skip the third, which is the note that normally tells you whether a chord is major or minor. Because of that missing third, power chords have an open, ambiguous quality that sounds thick and aggressive, especially with distortion.
Technically, power chords are intervals rather than true chords. You might see them written as G5 or A5 in chord charts. But in practice, they function like chords and you can use them anywhere you would normally play a full barre chord or open chord.
How to Play Your First Power Chord
Here is the basic shape. Place your index finger on the sixth string at the fifth fret — that gives you the note A, so this will be an A power chord. Then put your ring finger on the fifth string at the seventh fret, and your pinky on the fourth string at the seventh fret. Strum only those three strings.
The key to clean power chords is muting the strings you are not playing. Let your index finger rest lightly across the higher strings without pressing them down to the fret. This keeps them quiet if your pick accidentally catches them. Also, focus your strumming hand on hitting only the two or three strings you need.
Once you have the shape down, you can slide it anywhere. Move your index finger to the third fret on the sixth string and you have a G power chord. Shift the whole shape to the fifth string and you can play C, D, E, and any other power chord rooted there. It is the same formation everywhere — one shape, every key.
Power Chords Guitar Tips for Better Sound
A few things will make your power chords sound tighter right away. First, make sure your fretting fingers are pressing firmly and sitting close to the fret wire. Sloppy finger placement causes buzzing. Second, keep your wrist relaxed — tension kills your ability to switch chords quickly. Third, try palm muting with your picking hand for that chunky, percussive tone you hear in rock and metal riffs.
If you want to understand why power chords work the way they do, it helps to know your guitar root notes. Knowing where the note names fall on the sixth and fifth strings means you can instantly name any power chord you play. You can also try working power chords into common progressions — check out our lesson on G, C, and D chord songs and try swapping in power chord versions for a different feel.
Power chords are a foundation you will keep coming back to no matter how far you go with guitar. For more chord shapes, techniques, and theory, visit our guitar chords resource center.