CAGED Beyond Basics: 7ths, Sus Chords & Extensions
The CAGED system is often taught as a way to find major chord shapes across the guitar neck. That is a good starting point, but it is not the finish line.
Many guitarists learn the five basic CAGED forms, maybe connect them to barre chords, then hit a wall. They can find a C shape, A shape, G shape, E shape, or D shape, but they are not sure what to do when the chord symbol changes.
What happens when the chart says C7 instead of C?
What about Csus4, Cadd9, Cmaj9, Cdim, Caug, C11, or C9?
Do you need to memorize a completely new set of CAGED shapes for every possible chord quality?
No. That is the wrong way to think about it.
The real value of CAGED is not that it gives you five chord grips. The value is that it gives you a way to locate roots, thirds, fifths, sevenths, and extensions across the fretboard. Once you understand the notes inside the shape, you can adjust the chord quality instead of starting over every time you see a new symbol.
That is the difference between knowing CAGED as a beginner shortcut and using CAGED as a real fretboard system.
What CAGED really teaches you
The basic version of CAGED shows you how five familiar open-chord shapes can move around the neck:
- C shape
- A shape
- G shape
- E shape
- D shape
At first, most players treat those as chord shapes. That is fine. You have to start somewhere.
But if you stop there, CAGED becomes a memorization system. You learn where to put your fingers, but you still may not understand why the chord works.
The better way to use CAGED is to treat every shape as a map of chord tones.
A major chord contains three essential notes:
- Root
- 3rd
- 5th
For example, C major contains:
- C, the root
- E, the 3rd
- G, the 5th
Every CAGED shape is just another way to arrange those notes on the guitar. Once you can see the root, 3rd, and 5th inside each shape, you can start changing individual notes to create new chord qualities.
That is the key.
A CAGED shape is not a fixed object. It is a starting point.
Start with triads: major, minor, diminished, and augmented
Before you worry about 9ths and 11ths, make sure you understand triads.
A triad is a three-note chord. Most extended chords are built by starting with a triad, adding a seventh, then adding color notes such as the 9th, 11th, or 13th.
Here are the four basic triad types every guitarist should know:
| Chord type | Formula | Example in C |
|---|---|---|
| Major | 1, 3, 5 | C, E, G |
| Minor | 1, b3, 5 | C, Eb, G |
| Diminished | 1, b3, b5 | C, Eb, Gb |
| Augmented | 1, b3, b5 | C, E, G# |
This is where CAGED becomes more useful.
If you know where the 3rd is inside a major CAGED shape, you can lower it one fret to create a minor sound.
If you know where the 5th is, you can lower it for diminished or raise it for augmented.
That means you are not memorizing C major, C minor, C diminished, and C augmented as unrelated shapes. You are learning how one note changes the character of the chord.
That is a much deeper kind of fretboard knowledge.
Example: Changing a major CAGED shape
Start with a major chord shape.
Then ask:
- Where is the root?
- Where is the 3rd?
- Where is the 5th?
Now change one thing at a time.
To make it minor, lower the 3rd.
To make it diminished, lower the 3rd and the 5th.
To make it augmented, keep the major 3rd and raise the 5th.
You do not need to do this across the entire neck on day one. Pick one CAGED shape and learn how the chord quality changes in that one area. Then move to another shape.
How sus chords fit into CAGED
Sus chords confuse a lot of guitarists because they look like “extra” chords. They are actually simple once you understand chord tones.
A sus chord replaces the 3rd.
That is the most important point.
A sus2 chord uses:
- Root
- 2nd
- 5th
A sus4 chord uses:
- Root
- 4th
- 5th
So instead of thinking, “I need to memorize a new Csus2 shape,” think:
“What happened to the 3rd?”
In C major, the notes are:
- C
- E
- G
For Csus2, the E is replaced by D:
- C
- D
- G
For Csus4, the E is replaced by F:
- C
- F
- G
The 3rd is the note that tells your ear whether a chord is major or minor. When you replace it with the 2nd or 4th, the chord feels suspended. It has not fully settled into major or minor yet.
This is why sus chords are so useful in rhythm guitar, songwriting, worship guitar, folk, rock, pop, and country. They create movement without forcing a full chord change.
CAGED practice idea for sus chords
Choose one major CAGED shape.
Find every 3rd in that shape.
Then replace the 3rd with either:
- the 2nd for sus2
- the 4th for sus4
Do this slowly. Say the chord tones out loud. Listen to how each version changes the feeling of the chord.
The goal is not to collect more shapes. The goal is to hear what changed.
How to build 7th chords with CAGED
Once you understand triads, the next step is adding the 7th.
A seventh chord is a four-note chord. It starts with a triad, then adds some kind of seventh above the root.
Here are the most common seventh chord qualities:
| Chord type | Formula | Example in C |
|---|---|---|
| Major 7 | 1, 3, 5, 7 | C, E, G, B |
| Dominant 7 | 1, 3, 5, 7 | C, E, G, Bb |
| Minor 7 | 1, b3, 5, b7 | C, Eb, G, Bb |
| Minor 7b5 | 1, b3, b5, b7 | C, Eb, Gb, Bb |
| Diminished 7 | 1, b3, b5, bb7 | C, Eb, Gb, Bbb |
This is where many players get overwhelmed. They try to memorize every seventh chord as a separate grip.
A better method is to start with the triad and add the seventh intentionally.
For example:
- C major: C, E, G
- Cmaj7: C, E, G, B
- C7: C, E, G, Bb
Only one note changed between Cmaj7 and C7. The B became Bb.
That one-note difference completely changes the function of the chord.
Cmaj7 sounds stable, colorful, and resolved.
C7 creates tension that wants to resolve, often to F.
That is why dominant 7 chords are so important in blues, jazz, rock, country, gospel, and soul. They are not just fancier major chords. They create motion.
CAGED practice idea for 7th chords
Choose one CAGED major shape.
Find:
- the root
- the 3rd
- the 5th
- the major 7th
- the b7
Then alternate between the major 7 and b7.
Listen carefully. You are training your ear to hear function, not just shape.
What about 9ths, 11ths, and 13ths?
Extended chords sound complicated because the numbers get bigger. But the concept is simple.
A 9th is the same note as the 2nd, an octave higher.
An 11th is the same note as the 4th, an octave higher.
A 13th is the same note as the 6th, an octave higher.
So in C:
| Extension | Same as | Note |
|---|---|---|
| 9 | 2 | D |
| 11 | 4 | F |
| 13 | 6 | A |
The difference is harmonic context.
If a chord is called Cadd9, it usually means you have a C major triad with a D added:
- C, E, G, D
If a chord is called C9, it usually implies a dominant 7 chord with a 9 added:
- C, E, G, Bb, D
That difference matters.
Cadd9 and C9 are not the same chord.
Cadd9 is a major chord with color.
C9 is a dominant chord with tension.
This is one of the most common places guitarists get confused. The number 9 does not always mean the same harmonic function. You have to look at whether the seventh is included or implied.
Do you have to play every note?
No.
On guitar, you often cannot play every note in a large extended chord comfortably. That is normal.
For extended chords, guitarists often leave out the 5th. If you are playing with a bass player, you may also leave out the root in some contexts.
The notes you usually want to preserve are:
- the 3rd, because it defines major or minor
- the 7th, because it defines the chord’s function
- the extension, because it gives the chord its color
The notes you usually want to preserve are:
- E, the 3rd
- Bb, the b7
- D, the 9th
You may not need to play a big six-string grip. A smaller voicing can sound clearer, more professional, and easier to move.
That is especially true in a band, studio, or songwriting setting.
How CAGED helps you find extensions
The best way to apply CAGED to extensions is not to memorize one giant chord diagram.
Instead, use the CAGED shape to locate the basic chord tones first.
Start with:
- root
- 3rd
- 5th
- 7th
Then find nearby color tones:
- 2 or 9
- 4 or 11
- 6 or 13
Think in small neighborhoods, not the entire neck at once.
For example, if you are working from a CAGED E-shape root on the 6th string, do not try to find every possible extension across all six strings. Stay within a four or five fret area and ask:
- Where is the root?
- Where is the 3rd?
- Where is the 7th?
- Where is the nearest 9th?
- Can I add that note without making the voicing muddy?
- Do I need all six strings, or would three or four notes sound better?
This is where CAGED becomes practical. It gives you an address on the fretboard. Music theory tells you which notes to look for. Your ear tells you which version sounds best.
A useful shortcut
For many extended chords, start with a small shell voicing.
A shell voicing usually includes:
- root
- 3rd
- 7th
Then add one color note.
That is often more useful than trying to grab a large chord shape with every possible note.
For example:
- C7 shell: C, E, Bb
- C9 color note: add D
- C13 color note: add A
This approach works well for blues, jazz, funk, soul, country, gospel, and more sophisticated pop rhythm guitar.
Common mistakes when using CAGED for advanced chords
Mistake 1: Memorizing shapes without naming the notes
If you only memorize the grip, you will forget it as soon as the key changes or the shape moves.
Name the notes. Name the chord tones. Ask yourself which note is the 3rd, which note is the 7th, and which note is the extension.
Mistake 2: Thinking every chord needs all six strings
Many advanced chords sound better with fewer notes.
A tight three-note or four-note voicing can be clearer than a big six-string grip, especially when you are playing with a bass player, keyboard player, or another guitarist.
Mistake 3: Confusing add9 with 9
Cadd9 and C9 are different.
Cadd9 usually means a C major triad with D added.
C9 usually means a C7 chord with D added.
The b7 changes the function of the chord.
Mistake 4: Treating sus chords like minor chords
A sus chord does not have a major or minor 3rd. The 3rd has been replaced.
That is why sus chords feel open, floating, or unresolved.
Mistake 5: Learning too many variations at once
Do not try to master Cmaj7, C7, Cm7, Cdim7, Caug, Csus2, Csus4, C9, C11, and C13 in all five CAGED positions in one week.
That is a recipe for frustration.
Choose one chord type, one key, and one CAGED position. Learn it deeply. Then move it.
A simple practice routine for CAGED chord extensions
A simple practice routine for CAGED chord extensions
Step 1: Pick one CAGED shape
Start with one shape only. The E shape and A shape are often easiest because many guitarists already know barre-chord versions of them.
Step 2: Find the root, 3rd, and 5th
Do not skip this step. If you do not know where the basic triad tones are, the extensions will feel random.
Step 3: Change one chord tone
Try these one at a time:
- Lower the 3rd to make minor.
- Lower the 5th to make diminished.
- Raise the 5th to make augmented.
- Replace the 3rd with the 2nd to make sus2.
- Replace the 3rd with the 4th to make sus4.
Step 4: Add the 7th
Find the major 7 and b7 near your shape.
Practice moving between:
- major
- major 7
- dominant 7
- minor 7
Step 5: Add one extension
Add only one color note at a time.
Start with the 9th. It is one of the most useful extensions on guitar and often sits comfortably near familiar shapes.
Then experiment with the 11th and 13th.
Step 6: Apply it to music
Do not leave this as a fretboard exercise.
Use it in a progression.
Try:
- C to Csus4 to C
- C to Cadd9 to C
- Cmaj7 to C6
- C7 to F
- Dm7 to G9 to Cmaj7
- A7 to D
- G13 to C
The point is not to know more chord names. The point is to hear how the chord changes create movement.
Why this matters for rhythm, lead, and songwriting
Advanced CAGED work is not just for jazz players.
Rhythm guitarists can use it to create better chord movement, cleaner voicings, and more interesting parts.
Lead guitarists can use it to find chord tones, arpeggios, and target notes inside familiar scale positions.
Songwriters can use it to create harmonic color without making the song feel overcomplicated.
For example, adding a sus4 to a major chord can create lift.
Adding a 9th can make a chord feel wider or more modern.
Adding a dominant 7 can create motion into the next chord.
Using a diminished chord can create a passing sound between two more stable chords.
Using a smaller three-note voicing can leave more room for the vocal.
This is why CAGED is more than a fretboard diagram. It is a way to connect guitar shapes to musical function.
When you know how chords are built, you can make better choices in real songs.
The real goal: stop collecting shapes
If you are trying to take CAGED beyond the basics, the goal is not to memorize hundreds of chord diagrams.
The goal is to understand how chords are built.
Start with the major shape. Find the root, 3rd, and 5th. Then learn how to change one note at a time.
Lower the 3rd and you hear minor.
Lower the 5th and you hear diminished.
Raise the 5th and you hear augmented.
Replace the 3rd and you hear suspension.
Add the b7 and you hear dominant motion.
Add the 9th, 11th, or 13th and you hear color.
That is how CAGED becomes useful beyond the basics. It stops being a box system and becomes a way to understand harmony on the guitar.
You are not just learning where to put your fingers.
You are learning why the chord sounds the way it does.
Schedule a guitar lesson in Nashville
If CAGED makes sense in theory but still feels confusing on the guitar, Green Hills Guitar Studio can help you connect the dots.
In one-on-one guitar lessons, we can help you understand the fretboard, build better chord voicings, use triads and extensions, improve your rhythm playing, and apply music theory to actual songs.
Whether you are working on blues, rock, country, pop, folk, jazz, worship, songwriting, or Nashville-style rhythm guitar, the goal is the same: learn to play what you like to hear and understand what you are playing.
Ready to go beyond memorized shapes?
