The sus2 chord replaces the third with a major second above the root, giving the core set 1-2-5. Because the third is absent, the sonority stays intentionally undecided: it does not fully commit to major or minor until melody, bass motion, or the next chord clarifies direction. That built-in ambiguity is exactly why sus2 feels airy, modern, and emotionally flexible.
Construction
Basic formula: 1-2-5. In Csus2, spell C-D-G. Even this simple pitch set supports many voicing behaviors depending on spacing and register.
Sound Character
Sus2 tends to sound open, suspended, and gently forward-leaning rather than tense. Compared with sus4, it usually feels less urgent and more "wide-angle," especially in upper-register voicings.
Usage
Common in pop/rock guitar writing, ambient and cinematic pad harmony, and progressions that intentionally delay major/minor resolution for a few beats or an entire loop.
Examples
- Pop intros with sus2 on I before landing on a clear triad
- Film ostinatos that keep modal uncertainty alive
- Rock power-chord textures with added second for extra color
Play
Keep the fifth to preserve stability, and place the second high enough to avoid mud against the root. In denser arrangements, distributing tones across instruments often works better than stacking all tones in one register.
Harmonic Function
Sus2 can act as a true suspension that resolves, or as a stable modal sonority in its own right. The line above it usually decides whether listeners hear "temporary suspension" or "new home color."
Ear-training cues
Listen for an open fifth frame with a major second where your ear expects a third. Practice toggling between triad and sus2 to internalize that shift immediately.
