S Package
Twice a month. Good for busy schedules or younger beginners.
- 2 lessons per month (30 min each)
- Practice materials included
- Monthly check-in on progress
- Repertoire suited to your level

Lessons Online, Wherever You Are
Living elsewhere, travelling often, or simply prefer to learn from home? We meet over video for real, focused one-on-one lessons — the same close attention as sitting side by side.
Adults with unpredictable weeks, families outside Hamburg, expats who'd rather learn in English or Turkish, and students who moved away but didn't want to start over with someone new. If you have an instrument and a steady connection, distance stops mattering — I've taught beginners their very first notes and advanced players their hardest pieces entirely over video.
“We met Ms Ceren about two years ago; thanks to her, my daughter came to love the piano. She is a teacher who can connect with every age group. So glad she touched our lives ❤️🙏”— Ms Işıl, Melisa's (5) Mother
How online lessons work
You set your phone, tablet, or laptop so I can see your hands and the keyboard — I'll help you find the right angle in the first two minutes. From there it's a normal lesson: warm-up, focused work, something musical to finish. I can hear timing and intonation clearly, we share sheet music on screen, and I'll often send a short recording or a few notes afterwards so your practice stays on track between lessons.

Pricing
Start with one trial lesson. Then choose how often you want to come.
Twice a month. Good for busy schedules or younger beginners.
Most popular
Weekly lessons. The rhythm most students do best with.
Six lessons a month, shaped around your goals. We set the focus, pacing, and price together.
No contract. 10 lessons you can use at your own pace, valid for 12 months.
Every package includes 30-minute lessons, practice materials, and regular feedback.
Ask about packagesCommon questions
Yes — surprisingly well. Most of teaching is listening closely and watching your hands, and video does both. Adults and teens adapt within the first lesson; younger children do best with a parent nearby for the first few weeks.
An instrument (an acoustic piano or a weighted digital keyboard), a device with a camera, and a steady internet connection. That's it — nothing special to buy.
Usually Zoom or Google Meet, whichever you're comfortable with. I send a simple link before each lesson — you just click it.
They can, especially from around seven or eight. For younger children I usually suggest a parent sits in at first, and we keep lessons a little shorter and more playful to hold their focus.
Free Trial · Online
A free trial lesson over video. We play a little, sort out the setup together, and see whether learning this way feels right for you.
