Diminished triad (1–♭3–♭5); tense minor-third stack, tritone between outer voices.
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 diminished triad is one of the clearest "unstable" chord colors in tonal harmony. It is built from two stacked minor thirds, giving 1-♭3-♭5. That interval design creates a built-in tritone between root and fifth, so the chord sounds compact, tense, and direction-seeking rather than settled.
Formula: 1-♭3-♭5. In Cdim, the chord tones are C-E♭-G♭. Enharmonic spelling matters in functional writing: in a key context, choose note names that reflect how voices resolve (for example, G♭ resolving downward versus F♯ resolving upward).
Compared with minor and major triads, diminished feels narrower and more compressed. The minor third at the bottom suggests minor color, but the flattened fifth removes stability and introduces friction. The result is a dry, anxious quality that composers use to imply suspense, fragility, or motion that has not landed yet.
The diminished triad almost always behaves as functional tension. In major keys it commonly appears on vii°, pushing toward I; in minor, you often hear it on ii° or as part of dominant preparation. In chromatic writing it also works as a passing sonority between stable triads, especially when bass and upper voices move by semitone in contrary motion.
You hear diminished triads throughout common-practice harmony, romantic-era chromatic sequences, jazz turnarounds, and pop pre-chorus lifts. Even when players think in larger dominant chords, the upper structure often contains a diminished-triad fragment that carries the tension color.
Keep voicings clear and avoid unnecessary doubling of the most active tendency tone. On piano or guitar, compact shapes work well, but you can widen the texture by separating the tritone across registers. In ensemble settings, let one line define the resolution target so the chord's instability resolves intentionally rather than ambiguously.
Listen for two consecutive minor-third spans and the restless tritone shell. If a sonority sounds like a small, tense triangle that "wants to move" immediately, you are likely hearing a diminished triad function.
| Interval | semitones | Note | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0 | A♯ | |||
| 3 | C♯ | |||
| 6 | E |
| Degree | Triad | Seventh | Extended | Scale | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| I | |||||
| II | |||||
| III | |||||
| IV | |||||
| V | |||||
| VI | |||||
| VII |