There’s something special about folk guitar chords.
They don’t shout. They don’t dazzle with complexity.
They whisper. They pulse.
They ask you to lean in and listen.
Unlike jazz or progressive rock, folk music isn’t about showing off—it’s about showing up. With your story. With your scars. With your voice and your hands on the wood of your guitar.
It’s why chords like G, C, D, Em, and Am carry more weight than their simplicity suggests. They’re not just shapes. They’re settings—like the porch light that glows on a summer night, waiting for someone to come home.
In this post, I want to share with you the beauty of folk guitar chords, some creative shapes that go beyond the basics, and the artists who bring them to life. And if you’re working on your own playing, I’ll show you how our FretDeck system and Guitar Freaks Discord can support your journey.
But first, a quick story.
I Learned Folk Chords on My Dad’s Record Player
Growing up, my dad had a worn copy of Simon & Garfunkel’s Greatest Hits. I’d sit cross-legged, guitar in hand, learning The Boxer by ear—over and over until the chords made sense. G to C to D. A walk-up here. A suspended chord there. My fingers ached, but the emotion felt right.
Later came Mumford & Sons, Fleet Foxes, Iron & Wine. New textures, same backbone: open-string chords with emotional clarity.
I started to realize something:
Folk guitar isn’t about innovation. It’s about intention.

❌ Stop Guessing. Start Shredding.
If you’re still fumbling through scale patterns and box shapes… it’s costing you progress.
FretDeck™ is the no-fluff system that shows you exactly how to master the fretboard—fast. Early access.
⚡️ This isn’t for dabblers. It’s for players who want results.
👉 Click here to join the pre-launch now
Early access. Limited rewards. Don’t wait.
The DNA of Folk Guitar Chords
If you’re new to this space, here’s your core set of folk chords:
G – C – D – Em – Am – A – E – F – Dm – Bm
These chords live in the open position, ringing with the warmth and honesty that folk thrives on. But in the hands of the right player, they can sound more like a poem than a progression.
Let’s break a few of them down—and then explore some creative tweaks you can try.
🎸 G Major
The folk guitarist’s best friend.
e|---3---
B|---3---
G|---0---
D|---0---
A|---2---
E|---3---
This version—with both the B and high E strings fretted at the 3rd fret—rings beautifully. It’s the go-to G for Mumford & Sons. You’ll hear it in “I Will Wait” and “The Cave.”
Want it to shimmer even more? Try removing your index finger:
It becomes G5. Open, ambiguous, and cinematic.
🎸 Cadd9 (Folk’s Secret Weapon)
A beautiful alternative to C major, especially when transitioning from G.
e|---3---
B|---3---
G|---0---
D|---2---
A|---3---
E|---x---
Cadd9 keeps the same two top notes as G major, so the transition feels seamless. Use it in place of a regular C and notice how it lifts the harmony.
Used extensively by The Lumineers and Of Monsters and Men.
🎸 Em7 (The “Feel Everything” Chord)
e|---3---
B|---3---
G|---0---
D|---0---
A|---2---
E|---0---
Yes, technically it’s just Em with a few lifted fingers—but those lifted fingers change everything. It’s like the difference between sadness and bittersweet memory.
Play G – Em7 – Cadd9 – D and you’ll hear what I mean.
Folk Isn’t Just Open Chords—It’s Movement and Story
Many folk songs live in G major or C major for a reason. They allow for open ringing strings, alternate bass notes, and melodic fingerpicking.
But it’s what you do with the chords that makes the difference.
Let’s take a few classic bands and explore what they do with folk guitar chords.
🎶 Mumford & Sons: Aggressive Chords with Acoustic Power
Mumford popularized banjo-like strumming on a dreadnought guitar. But their chord vocabulary is surprisingly simple—what makes it powerful is how they play:
- Heavy downstrums
- Palm muting + open string accents
- Emotional build-ups with suspended chords
Try this progression from “Awake My Soul”:
C – Em – F – C
C – G – Am – F
They’ll often hammer-on into chords or switch between C and Cadd9 for movement.
🎶 Iron & Wine: Whispered Chords and Suspended Magic
Sam Beam’s style is softer—fingerpicked, moody, and full of partial chords.
Example: Instead of full G major, he might play:
e|---0---
B|---0---
G|---0---
D|---0---
A|---2---
E|---3---
This leaves the top strings ringing, creating a spacious, unresolved sound. Pair that with Dsus2 or Asus2, and you’re in storytelling territory.
🎶 Phoebe Bridgers & Modern Folk
Phoebe plays emotionally literate folk. You’ll find minor shapes, alternate tunings, and open-voiced chords that create mood.
In “Motion Sickness,” you can hear:
markdownCopyEditG – Cmaj7 – Em – D
But it’s played with layered textures—capo on fret 3 or 5, sometimes using fingerpicked arpeggios with drone notes.
Folk isn’t static. It evolves with the artist. That’s the beauty of it.
Creative Folk Chords to Explore
Want to go beyond the basics? Try these:
🌲 Dsus2
e|---0---
B|---3---
G|---2---
D|---0---
A|---x---
E|---x---
Pairs beautifully with G and Cadd9.
🌲 Asus2
e|---0---
B|---0---
G|---2---
D|---2---
A|---0---
E|---x---
Melancholy and wide-open. Heard in Ray LaMontagne and Bon Iver.
🌲 Cmaj7
e|---0---
B|---0---
G|---0---
D|---2---
A|---3---
E|---x---
One of the prettiest folk chords. Use it to replace standard C when you want something more gentle.
Practice Prompts (Folk Style)
Try these to infuse creativity into your folk playing:
🎵 Prompt #1: “One Shape, Many Emotions”
Take a single chord like Em7. Play it quietly, then loudly. Strum, then fingerpick. Let your right hand shape the emotion.
🎵 Prompt #2: “Chord Sub Swap”
Play G – D – Em – C
Then replace D with Dsus2 or Dadd4. Replace C with Cmaj7. Listen to the shift.
🎵 Prompt #3: “Lyric-Driven Progression”
Write a one-line lyric. Build a 3-chord progression that feels like that line. Don’t overthink it. Let it flow.
How FretDeck Can Help You Learn Folk Guitar Chords Visually
One of the biggest struggles guitarists have—folk or otherwise—is visualizing the fretboard.
That’s where FretDeck comes in.
It’s not a course. It’s not a wall poster. It’s a deck of cards designed to help you see chord shapes, scale positions, and root notes across the fretboard—in any key.
If you’re trying to play folk music and want to:
- Understand how chords connect
- Build your own progressions
- Move shapes up the neck
- Use scales and chord tones melodically
Then FretDeck: Pentatonic Guitar Scales is your new best friend.
We just launched it on Kickstarter—and you can back it early:
🎸 👉 Back the FretDeck Kickstarter Now

❌ Stop Guessing. Start Shredding.
If you’re still fumbling through scale patterns and box shapes… it’s costing you progress.
FretDeck™ is the no-fluff system that shows you exactly how to master the fretboard—fast. Early access.
⚡️ This isn’t for dabblers. It’s for players who want results.
👉 Click here to join the pre-launch now
Early access. Limited rewards. Don’t wait.
Join the Folk-Loving Community on Discord
Inside our Guitar Freaks Hangout Discord, we talk about:
- Chord ideas
- Progression prompts
- Song breakdowns
- Artist inspiration (yes, we talk about Phoebe, Sam Beam, Marcus Mumford, and more)
You’ll also get early access to lessons from SoloCraft, RhythmCraft, and our full FretDeck system.
🎶 👉 Join the Guitar Freaks Discord here

Join Guitar Freaks Hangout on Discord! 🎸
Get Fret Logic FREE!
Join the Guitar Freaks Hangout Discord and get exclusive access to my entire e-book, Fret Logic! Master the fretboard and elevate your solos with this comprehensive guide.
👉 Don’t miss out—join now and download your free copy!
Final Thoughts: Folk Chords Aren’t About Simplicity—They’re About Honesty
You can learn every theory rule in the book.
You can master all the exotic jazz voicings.
But if your G chord doesn’t mean something…
If your Cmaj7 doesn’t carry emotion…
…it won’t resonate.
Folk guitar chords remind us that music is about connection. To yourself. To your story. To the listener.
So keep it simple.
Make it personal.
And when you’re ready to go deeper…
🎸 Join the Kickstarter
🎸 Join the Discord
We’re building something beautiful—and you’re invited.
—
Justin Comstock
Guitar Freaks Blog & FretDeck Creator
👉 Read: Soul Guitar Chords – The Groove, the Feel, the Flow
👉 Ultimate Guitar Tabs – to find folk song charts