Chord Chart Maker

Three free ways to chart a song. Pick the one that matches what you need, then build, print, or save it. No sign-up required to start.

Chord Diagram Maker

Finger-position shapes

Draw the dots-on-a-fretboard diagram for any chord. Great for teaching shapes, songbooks, and chord libraries.

Open diagram maker

Chord Sheet Maker

Chords over lyrics

Write chord names above the words, transpose to any key, and print a clean play-from sheet. Saved to your private library.

Open sheet maker

Chord Progression Chart

Chord-only lead sheets

Lay out chords in measures with barlines, repeats, and sections, the way a lead sheet reads. No lyrics, so you can share it publicly.

Open progression chart

Which chord chart should I make?

A chord chart can mean a few different things depending on what you are playing from. Guitar Scribble gives you a free tool for each, so you are not forcing one format to do another job.

Chord diagrams show exactly where your fingers go on the fretboard. Use them when you want to teach or document how to play a specific chord shape.

A chords-over-lyrics sheet puts the chord names right above the words, so you can sing and play at the same time. It is the format most people mean when they say "chord sheet."

A chord progression chart is a chord-only lead sheet: chords laid out in measures with barlines, repeats, and section markers, with no lyrics and no melody. It is ideal for jams, jazz tunes, and band rehearsals, and because it has no lyrics it is safe to share publicly. You can also browse community chord progressions for ideas.

All three are free to build with no sign-up. A free account lets you save your work, and Pro removes export watermarks and unlocks unlimited saves.