1234 1213 GCEA
Intermediate

D#m7♭5 Ukulele Chord

A tense, sophisticated chord, D#m7♭5 gathers D#, F#, A and C# into a half-diminished sound that wants to move. It works beautifully as the ii in a minor ii-V-i and adds smoky tension to jazz, soul and cinematic passages.

Also known as

  • D#ø
  • Ebø
  • D# ø
  • D#ø7
  • Eb ø
  • Ebø7
  • D# ø7
  • Eb ø7
  • D#m7b5
  • Ebm7♭5
  • Ebm7b5
  • D# m7♭5
  • D# m7b5
  • Eb m7♭5
  • Eb m7b5
  • E-flatø
  • D-sharpø
  • E-flat ø
  • E-flatø7
  • D-sharp ø
  • D-sharpø7
  • E-flat ø7
  • D#half-dim
  • D-sharp ø7
  • Ebhalf-dim
  • E-flatm7♭5
  • E-flatm7b5
  • D# half-dim
  • D#half-dim7
  • D-sharpm7♭5
  • D-sharpm7b5
  • Eb half-dim
  • Ebhalf-dim7
  • E-flat m7♭5
  • E-flat m7b5
  • D# half-dim7
  • D-sharp m7♭5
  • D-sharp m7b5
  • Eb half-dim7
  • E-flathalf-dim
  • D-sharphalf-dim
  • E-flat half-dim
  • E-flathalf-dim7
  • D-sharp half-dim
  • D-sharphalf-dim7
  • E-flat half-dim7
  • D-sharp half-dim7
  • D# half-diminished 7th
  • Eb half-diminished 7th
  • D# half-diminished seventh
  • Eb half-diminished seventh
  • E-flat half-diminished 7th
  • D-sharp half-diminished 7th
  • E-flat half-diminished seventh
  • D-sharp half-diminished seventh

How to Play This Chord

Position your fingers on the fretboard as shown in the diagram. The vertical lines represent the four strings, from the top G string (left) to the A string (right), and the horizontal lines are the frets. Numbers inside the dots indicate which finger to use: 1 (index), 2 (middle), 3 (ring), 4 (pinky). An X means don't play that string; an O means play it open. A bar spanning multiple strings means one finger presses across all of them at once — this is known as a barre chord.

Tips & Tricks

Barre your index across the G, C and E strings at fret 2, then add your middle on the C string at fret 3 and your ring on the A string at fret 4. Keep your thumb low behind the neck so the index barre has the leverage to hold all three strings clean.

There are many ways to play this chord. Try these:

AECG 2 3 2 4 2 3 2 4
AECG 4 2 3 2 4 2 3 2
AECG 2 2 3 4 2 2 3 4
AECG 2 2 4 3 2 4 2 2

See how D#m7♭5 works with other chords — Progression Generator