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Key Signatures: Every Major and Minor Key Explained

Key signatures tell you which notes are sharp or flat in a piece of music. This guide covers all 30 major and minor keys with the circle of fifths.

Dan Farrant
·Published September 15, 2023 ·11 min read

A key signature is a set of sharps or flats placed at the beginning of a staff. It tells the performer which notes should be consistently raised or lowered throughout the piece — saving composers from writing an accidental every single time.

What Is a Key Signature?

When a piece of music is in a particular key, certain notes are always sharp or always flat. Rather than marking each one individually, we place all the sharps or flats together at the start of every line. This collection is the key signature.

The Circle of Fifths

The circle of fifths is a visual tool that shows the relationship between all 12 keys. Moving clockwise, each key is a perfect fifth above the previous one and adds one sharp. Moving anticlockwise, each key adds one flat.

Sharp Keys

Flat Keys

Relative Minor Keys

Every major key has a relative minor that shares the same key signature. The relative minor is always found a minor third (3 semitones) below the major key. For example, A minor is the relative minor of C major — both have no sharps or flats.

Written by

Dan Farrant

Dan Farrant is the founder of Hello Music Theory and a music educator with over 15 years of experience teaching music theory to students of all levels. He holds a degree in music and has helped tens of thousands of students prepare for their grade exams.

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