Worship-ready
Built for services, rehearsals, and live cues.
Collaborate on chord sheets, create set lists, and share live updates in real time. Team Chords is built for rehearsals, services, and shows where everyone needs the same song, key, and order on stage.
Built for worship teams, cover bands, and musicians who need reliable, real-time collaboration.
Why teams use it
Store chord sheets, organize set lists, and share live outputs without wrestling with scattered docs. It’s a better fit for bands that need fast rehearsal prep and dependable on-stage changes.
Built for services, rehearsals, and live cues.
Setlists and song changes stay easy to manage.
Find songs, keys, and set lists quickly.
Keep every musician on the same page.
Store and organize chord sheets in one searchable library.
Create and manage set lists for every service, rehearsal, or show.
See changes instantly with live updates across your team.
Invite bandmates and keep everyone on the same page.
Pricing
Start free, then grow into shared live set lists, larger libraries, and the collaboration features your team actually uses.
Jam Session
For solo artists and hobbyists getting started with a small library.
Gigging Band
For active groups that need a bigger shared library and flexible set lists.
Pro Library
For organizations that need the largest shared chord library and set list capacity.
Latest stories
May 15, 2026
A practical guide covering 8 essential formatting tips for chord sheets, helping worship teams and bands improve rehearsal efficiency, reduce confusion on stage, and streamline their music workflow.
May 12, 2026
A practical comparison of ChordPro and PDF chord charts for worship teams and bands. Covers transposition, formatting for screens, collaboration, annotation, and library management, with real‑world rehearsal scenarios to help you decide which format fits your workflow.
May 11, 2026
Sunday morning comes fast. You walk into the rehearsal room, plug in, and immediately realize half the band learned a different version of the bridge, the bass player doesn't have a chart, and someone changed the key on the fly last Wednesday. This article explains how organized worship teams run rehearsals efficiently, covering setlist planning, sharing materials, chord workflows, part assignments, rehearsal structure, handling last‑minute adds, and communication between sessions.
Start here