The structure of helical polymers is dictated by the molecular chirality of their monomer units. Particularly, macromolecular helices with monomer sequence control have the potential to generate chiral topologies. In α-helical folded peptides, the sequential repetition of amino acids generates a chiral layer defined by the amino acid side chains projected outside the amide backbone. Despite being closely related to peptides’ structural and functional properties, to the best of our knowledge, a general exo-helical symmetry model has not been yet described for the α-helix. Here, we perform the theoretical, computational, and spectroscopic elucidation of the α-helix principal exo-helical topologies. Non-canonical labeled amino acids are employed to spectroscopically characterize the different exo-helical topologies in solution, which precisely match the theorical prediction. Backbone-to-chromophore distance also shows the expected impact in the exo-helices’ geometry and spectroscopic fingerprint. Theoretical prediction and spectroscopic validation of this exo-helical topological model provides robust experimental evidence of the chiral potential on the surface of helical peptides and outlines an entirely new structural scenario for the α-helix.