Free scale library

Ukulele Scales

Look up any ukulele scale on any tuning. This free scale library covers 44 scales (essential, modes, minor + jazz, European exotic, Middle Eastern, East Asian + Pacific) across standard high-G, low-G, baritone (DGBE), and D-tuning. Pick a root and a scale, and the tool lights every position on the neck where a scale note lives, with the root highlighted. Hear the scale played ascending or descending with realistic plucked-string audio, mirror the diagram for left-handed players, and copy a shareable link.

Free ukulele scale library. 44 scales, 4 tunings, whole-neck diagrams. Tap to hear ascending or descending, copy a link to share.

Features
  • 100% free
  • 44 scales
  • 4 tunings
  • Audio playback
  • Lefty mode
Tuning
Lefthanded
Root note
Scale

Most used C scales

The five scales you'll meet most often in pop, folk, blues, rock, and worship songs on the C root: Major, Natural Minor, Major Pentatonic, Minor Pentatonic, and Blues. Learn these five and you can play along with most of the popular songs in the UkuTabs catalog. Click any card to load it into the main workspace above.

How to read a ukulele scale diagram

A scale diagram is different from a chord diagram. Instead of showing one shape with a few fingers pressed down, it lights up every position on the neck where a note from the scale lives. You'll usually see two or three dots per string across the first twelve frets, and those are the only places the scale notes appear.

The root note (the scale's home pitch) is highlighted in a different colour from the rest, so you can see where the scale's tonal centre lands. In C Major, for instance, every C across the neck is marked in brick red while the other six notes of the scale (D, E, F, G, A, B) appear in olive. Press any lit position and you're guaranteed to be in the scale.

Reading the diagram works the same way as reading a chord: the four vertical lines are the strings (G, C, E, A from left to right in standard tuning), the horizontal lines are the frets, and the thick bar at the top is the nut. Open strings sit just above the nut. The numbers along the bottom mark important frets (3, 5, 7, 9, 12) to help orient you.

Scales repeat every twelve frets. The pattern of dots you see in the first twelve frets is identical to the pattern from fret twelve onward (just shifted up an octave), which is why most scale charts stop at the 12th fret marker.

All C scales

How ukulele scale names work

Scale names follow a tight pattern. The capital letter is the root note, the same as a chord. What follows describes the family the scale belongs to: how many notes it has, what interval pattern it uses, and what musical mood it carries. Hover any card below for the deeper context: the intervals from the root, what the scale sounds like, and where you'll hear it in real music.

Maj
Major1 2 3 4 5 6 7, bright + stable
m
Natural Minor1 2 ♭3 4 5 ♭6 ♭7, sad + dark
MajPent
Major Pentatonic1 2 3 5 6, folk + country
mPent
Minor Pentatonic1 ♭3 4 5 ♭7, blues + rock
Blues
Blues1 ♭3 4 ♭5 5 ♭7, bluesy tension
Dor
Dorian1 2 ♭3 4 5 6 ♭7, jazzy minor
Phr
Phrygian1 ♭2 ♭3 4 5 ♭6 ♭7, dark + Spanish
Lyd
Lydian1 2 3 ♯4 5 6 7, dreamy + floaty
Mix
Mixolydian1 2 3 4 5 6 ♭7, bluesy major
Loc
Locrian1 ♭2 ♭3 4 ♭5 ♭6 ♭7, dark + unstable
Harm
Harmonic Minor1 2 ♭3 4 5 ♭6 7, dramatic minor
Mel
Melodic Minor1 2 ♭3 4 5 6 7, jazz minor
Chrom
ChromaticAll 12 notes, every semitone
Exotic
Exotic scalesArabic, Hungarian, Japanese…
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