Beginner · €400–600
Yamaha P-45
“I recommend this for my younger students — the weighted keys feel real without the price tag.”
Recommended to 15+ students

CURATED BY CEREN
After years of teaching, I know which instruments help students progress and which ones collect dust. These are my honest recommendations at every price point.
Beginner · €400–600
“I recommend this for my younger students — the weighted keys feel real without the price tag.”
♫ Recommended to 15+ students
Intermediate · €600–900
“This is what I tell parents when they're ready to invest. The sound quality is noticeably better, and the Bluetooth lets students play along with recordings.”
♫ Recommended to 15+ students
Advanced · €900–1400
“For serious students who practice daily. The GHS action and Pure CF sound engine make this feel like a real piano.”
♫ Recommended to 15+ students
| Yamaha P-45 | Roland FP-30XCeren's Pick | Yamaha P-125a | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Price | €400–600 | €600–900 | €900–1400 |
| Keys | 88 weighted (GHS) | 88 weighted (PHA-4) | 88 weighted (GHS) |
| Weight | 11.5 kg | 14.3 kg | 11.8 kg |
| Key Features | 10 voices, USB MIDI, compact design | SuperNATURAL piano, Bluetooth MIDI/Audio, headphone jacks | Pure CF sound engine, 24 voices, USB audio recording |
| View on Amazon.de → | View on Amazon.de → | View on Amazon.de → |
“The right instrument doesn't make you a better musician — but the wrong one can hold you back. I've seen too many students struggle with keyboards that don't have weighted keys or microphones that make their voice sound thin.”— Ceren Soyer, Piano & Voice Teacher
FAQ
For beginners, I always recommend a digital piano with weighted keys. They're more affordable, don't need tuning, and you can practice with headphones. Once you're sure you want to commit long-term, an acoustic piano is a wonderful investment.
I recommend at least €400 for a digital piano with 88 weighted keys. Anything cheaper usually has unweighted or semi-weighted keys, which makes it harder to develop proper technique. The Yamaha P-45 is the sweet spot.
Not for lessons — your laptop or phone mic is fine for online sessions. But recording yourself practicing is one of the best ways to improve, and even a basic USB microphone makes a huge difference in what you can hear.
I don't recommend it. You'll run out of keys within the first few months of learning. If space is limited, a portable 88-key digital piano like the P-45 is only 133cm wide — about the width of a small desk.
Need help choosing?
Every student is different. Tell me your budget, goals, and living situation, and I'll give you a personal recommendation.