E Diminished Chord

    Tense, unstable sound

    EGA#

    Edim is playable as an open chord near the nut (Edim), making it one of the more beginner-friendly shapes.

    Edim - Edim

    Position 1 of 1
    Edim
    Edim
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    What is a Edim chord?

    A diminished chord stacks the root, minor 3rd and diminished 5th (b5). Both interval gaps are minor 3rds, making the chord feel uniformly tense and unstable. Diminished triads almost never function as a tonal home — they're used as passing chords, secondary leading-tone chords (vii°/V → V), or as connective tissue between two stable chords.

    Notes in the chord: E – G – A#

    Intervals: Root, b3, b5 (measured from the root)

    Where Edim fits in a key

    Edim appears as the vii° in F major.

    Common progressions with Edim

    vii° → I (leading-tone resolution) — in F major

    Edim → F

    When to use a diminished chord

    As a passing chord, Edim most often leads up a half step into F. Use a diminished chord to step chromatically between two diatonic chords (e.g. C → C#dim → Dm in C major), or as the vii° leading-tone chord in any major key. Diminished chords are essential vocabulary in jazz, ragtime, classical and any genre that prizes voice-leading over modal stasis. They're rarely the home of a song; they're the bridge.

    Common substitutions for Edim

    • Diminished 7th — adds the bb7 for the full diminished-7 sound (every interval is a minor 3rd)
    • Half-diminished (m7b5) — softer cousin used as the ii in minor-key ii-V-i turnarounds
    • Dominant 7 b9 with no root — same notes as a diminished 7, often substituted in jazz
    Chords in the key of F major
    Other E chordsA–G
    Diminished chords in other keys
    Scales that work over Edim
    Scales & guides for this chord

    Improvisation Basics

    Learn to solo over progressions

    Edim chord FAQ

    Practice with Improvisio

    Use Edim in a progression and see which scales work best.

    Try it in the trainer