Learn to play the D major chord on guitar using simple finger positions, strumming patterns, and practice tips to build confidence and rhythm.



Step-by-step guide to play the D major chord on guitar
Step 1
Sit on a chair and rest the guitar on your right leg if you are right-handed or on your left leg if you are left-handed.
Step 2
Tune your guitar to standard tuning E A D G B e using a tuner or tuning app until the strings sound right.
Step 3
Put your left-hand thumb behind the neck near the middle so your fingers can curl and reach the strings comfortably.
Step 4
Place your index finger on the 2nd fret of the G string (the 3rd string).
Step 5
Place your middle finger on the 2nd fret of the high E string (the 1st string).
Step 6
Place your ring finger on the 3rd fret of the B string (the 2nd string).
Step 7
Strum only the four thinnest strings (D G B e) once with your pick or thumb in one smooth downstroke.
Step 8
Pluck each of the four strings one at a time to check that every note in the D chord rings clearly.
Step 9
Move any finger that makes a buzzing sound a little closer to the metal fret and press down firmly.
Step 10
Lift all your left-hand fingers off the strings so the strings are silent.
Step 11
Put your fingers back into the D chord shape exactly where you placed them before.
Step 12
Strum the D chord slowly once and listen for a bright clear sound.
Step 13
Repeat steps 10 to 12 slowly five times while counting so your hands build memory and rhythm.
Step 14
Share a photo or short video of your D chord practice and your progress on DIY.org so others can cheer you on!
Final steps
You're almost there! Complete all the steps, bring your creation to life, post it, and conquer the challenge!


Help!?
What can I use if I don't have a guitar tuner or a pick?
Use a free tuning app or an online tuner to tune to standard E A D G B e, and strum the four thinnest strings with your thumb instead of a pick for the single downstroke.
My D chord sounds buzzy or muted — how can I fix it?
If notes buzz when you strum the four thinnest strings, move the offending finger slightly closer to the metal fret, press down firmly with your fingertip, and check that your left-hand thumb is behind the neck as in step 3.
How do I adapt this activity for different ages or skill levels?
For younger children use a small-scale nylon-string guitar or a ukulele and reduce the repeats of steps 10–12 to three slow tries, while older kids can add a metronome, increase repetitions, and practice chord-switching after step 12.
Any ways to extend or personalize the D chord practice?
Make it more challenging by timing your five repeats with a metronome, practicing smooth transitions from D to G or A after step 12, and sharing a short progress video on DIY.org as in step 13.
Watch videos on how to play the D major chord on guitar
Facts about guitar chords for kids
⏱️ Short daily practice bursts (5–10 minutes) build chord-switching speed faster than one long session.
🎶 D major is one of the first chords many learners pick up and appears in hundreds of pop, rock, and folk songs.
🧠 Practicing smooth transitions like G → D → A trains muscle memory so your fingers start moving automatically.
🤏 The common open D shape uses three fingers on strings 1–3 while the 4th (D) string rings open.
🎸 The D major chord is a three-note major triad (D–F♯–A) and sounds bright and happy — great for sing-alongs!


Only $6.99 after trial. No credit card required