Fadd9 Guitar Chord
F Add9 · F–A–C–G
Fadd9 is the F add9 chord: F–A–C–G. Its sound is colorful and modern — a plain triad sweetened with the 9th, all over 90s rock and acoustic pop.
Unlike F9, Fadd9 skips the ♭7 and just stacks the 9th (G) on the plain triad — color without jazz function. It shines on acoustic guitar where the 9th can ring against open strings, and it's the secret behind countless 90s alt-rock and worship progressions in F and C.
The most common way to play Fadd9 is the add9 grip at the 1st fret (1 x 3 2 1 3, low E string to high E string). Below you'll find 3 ways to play it across the neck, from open position to barre and shell voicings, with the theory behind the chord and the progressions it lives in.
How to Play Fadd9: 3 Voicings
Frets are listed from the low E string to the high E string. x = don't play that string, 0 = open string.
Fadd9 Chord Theory
| Interval | R | 3 | 5 | 9 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Note | F | A | C | G |
Fadd9 is built from the F major scale.
Fadd9 Chord FAQ
What notes are in the Fadd9 chord?
Fadd9 contains 4 notes: F (R), A (3), C (5), G (9). The interval formula for a add9 chord is R–3–5–9.
What is the easiest way to play Fadd9 on guitar?
Use the add9 grip at the 1st fret: 1 x 3 2 1 3 (frets listed from the low E string to the high E string, x = don't play that string). Fadd9 has no open-position shape in standard tuning, so this movable form is the standard starting point.
Is Fadd9 a major or minor chord?
Fadd9 is built on a major triad (F–A–C) with the 9 added, so it behaves as a major-family chord.
What keys use the Fadd9 chord?
Fadd9 appears diatonically in F major (as I), C major (as IV), and Bb major (as V) — plus D minor, its relative minor key.
Related Chords
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