Four-Chord Guitar Songs
1,267 four-chord guitar songs for fuller rhythm patterns. Grab a progression and build set-ready flow.
1267 songs • 497 artists
- Kane Brown - Hometown
- Jerrod Niemann - But I Do
- Tate McRae - R U Ok
- Mumford & Sons - Not With Haste
- Julia Michaels - Falling For Boys
- Jeremy Zucker - You Were Good To Me
- Jaymes Young - Feel Something
- BTS - DNA
- Lorde - Royals
- James Bay - Best Fake Smile
- Miley Cyrus - 7 Things
- Coldplay - Every Teardrop Is A Waterfall
- Tubbo - Life By The Sea
- Billie Eilish - 6.18.18
- BTS - I'm Fine
- Amy MacDonald - This Is The Life
- The Weeknd - Stargirl Interlude
- Clairo - Bubble Gum
- Lorde - Buzzcut Season
- Morgan Wallen - Thought You Should Know
- Maroon 5 - Beautiful Goodbye
- BTS - Butter
- Taylor Swift - Call It What You Want
- BTS - I Need U
- Taylor Swift - You Belong With Me Ukulele
- Jaymes Young - Habits Of My Heart
- Maroon 5 - The Man Who Never Lied
- Maroon 5 - Wipe Your Eyes
- Maroon 5 - Lucky Strike
- Olivia Rodrigo - Jealousy Jealousy
- Wilbur Soot - Jubilee Line
- Maroon 5 - Moves Like Jagger
- Maroon 5 - She Will Be Loved
- A Day to Remember - Everything We Need
- Maroon 5 - Girls Like You
- Simple Plan - Untitled
- Wet Leg - Wet Dream
- Bob Dylan - I Shall Be Released
- Carpenters - You
- Christmas Carol - The First Noel
- Ed Sheeran - Don't
- Walker Hayes - Pants
- Taylor Swift - All Too Well
- Nirvana - Heart Shaped Box
- Radiohead - Creep
- Leeland - Opposite Way
- AURORA - I Went Too Far
- Sara Bareilles - Bad Idea
- Green Day - Ordinary World
- Taylor Swift - Ours
Four chord guitar songs for fuller progressions
Explore 1,267 four chord guitar songs that unlock richer progressions and longer song forms. Four chord loops appear in countless popular songs, so this list is perfect for building a set that feels complete. Each card shows the chords clearly so you can plan transitions before you play, and filters by genre or year keep the list focused on your taste.
Four chord guitar songs are often searched by players who want fuller arrangements and more realistic song flow. This page keeps the selection simple while giving you the control to pick songs that match your level. If you are ready to move beyond short progressions, these charts provide the next step without overwhelming complexity. Because the chords are visible on each card, you can avoid songs that include shapes you are not ready for yet. That makes practice more efficient and keeps motivation high during longer sessions, especially when you track progress week by week and stay consistent.
Structured practice for longer loops
Work through the chords one by one, then connect them in pairs before playing the full progression. Start slow and raise tempo in small steps. Use a metronome to keep timing honest, and simplify the strumming pattern if transitions feel unstable. Clean tone and consistent rhythm matter more than speed, especially on longer loops.
To build endurance, split the song into sections and practice each part separately. Taking short breaks between repeats keeps your hands relaxed and helps you return with cleaner changes. Add favorites to a weekly rotation and group songs by similar chord shapes to speed up muscle memory. When four chord progressions feel comfortable, you can prepare longer sets with confidence, while still using two or three chord lists for warm ups and quick rhythm resets.