Full dominant color with added 13th; broad jazz/soul tension resolving with clarity.
Intervals from the root that spell this chord and its chord tones.
Parent scales and degrees where this chord appears as a diatonic sonority.
Scales that contain this chord’s notes and usually fit over it.
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The dominant thirteenth chord is one of the richest standard dominant colors in tonal harmony. It keeps the forward pull of a dominant seventh, but adds a warmer upper extension that sounds wide, musical, and emotionally open. In charts it appears as C13, and in practice it is a core sonority across jazz, soul, funk, and modern pop arranging.
The complete theoretical stack is 1-3-5-♭7-9-11-13. In C13 that can be spelled as C-E-G-B♭-D-F-A, though real voicings rarely include every tone at once. Performers usually prioritize guide tones (3 and ♭7) plus the 13 as the defining color, then add or omit inner tones to keep clarity.
Use 13 when a plain V7 sounds too dry but altered dominants would sound too tense. It is excellent in cadential dominant chords, turnarounds, and groove-based comping where harmony should feel sophisticated but still grounded in functional movement. In ensembles, 13 voicings also blend beautifully with horns and layered keyboards.
Keep the 3 and ♭7 clearly voiced, then place the 13 in a singable upper register. If the voicing gets muddy, remove the 5 or 11 first. The goal is a chord that sounds rich and spacious while still pointing clearly toward resolution.
| Interval | semitones | Note | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0 | A♯ | |||
| 4 | C𝄪 | |||
| 7 | E♯ | |||
| 10 | G♯ | |||
| 14 | B♯ | |||
| 21 | F𝄪 |
| Degree | Triad | Seventh | Extended | Scale | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| I | |||||
| II | |||||
| III | |||||
| IV | |||||
| V | |||||
| VI | |||||
| VII |
These modes come from a defined series of intervals! Checkout our blogpost about the major modes!