[Ru(phen)2 (dppz)]2+ has been studied since the 1990s due to its ‘light-switch’ properties. It can be used as a luminescent DNA probe, with emission switched on through DNA binding. The luminescence observed is dependent on the solvent accessibility of the pyrazine nitrogen atoms, and therefore is sensitive to changes in both binding site of the cation and chromophore orientation. The compound is also chiral, and there are distinct differences between the enantiomers in terms of the emission behaviour when bound to a variety of DNA sequences. Whilst a number of binary DNA-complex X-ray crystal structures are available, most include the lambda enantiomer and there is very little structural information about binding of the delta enantiomer. Here, we present the first X-ray crystal structure of a delta enantiomer bound to well-matched DNA, in the absence of the other, lamda enantiomer. We show how the binding site observed here can be related to a more general pattern of motifs in the crystallographic literature and propose that the delta enantiomer can bind with five different binding modes, offering a new hypothesis for the interpretation of solution data.doi: 10.1093/nar/gkw753 - 2016