Check out the Casio privia keyboards. They all have really high quality sounds and a decent price. I have the $800 model and use it as my main gigging keyboard. Answer from Abmin7b5 on reddit.com
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Reddit
reddit.com › r/piano › best digital piano under $2000 to learn on
Best digital piano under $2000 to learn on : r/piano
May 20, 2024 - Yamaha Clavinovas are very nice and true to acoustic pianos (however I don’t own it and really don’t think something like that is necessary for a beginner digital piano - at that point I would just get a used acoustic piano). CLP-725 or 735 I think are entry level ones and around that price ...
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Reddit
reddit.com › r/piano › what it is the best keyboard that you can buy under 2000$?
r/piano on Reddit: What it is the best keyboard that you can buy under 2000$?
June 1, 2024 -

I have been learning how to play the piano, and ready to invest a little money on a decent keyboard that I can use to play at home and also to make some videos and record any type of music. I would like to have something with a variety of features, but most important something that can transport music because I want to focus on play and sing at the same time. Thanks !

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Reddit
reddit.com › r/piano › best digital upright piano around $2,000
r/piano on Reddit: Best Digital Upright Piano around $2,000
June 10, 2022 -

My daughter is starting to take piano lessons and we want a piano she can grow into. We are looking for a digital upright piano around the $2,000 price point. We have been leaning towards the Roland RP701. Is there a better digital upright piano for home use around this price geared toward beginner/intermediate player? Bonus if it comes in a light oak or equivalent finish.

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Reddit
reddit.com › r/piano › any good digital piano recommendations for under $2,000?
r/piano on Reddit: Any good digital piano recommendations for under $2,000?
December 27, 2017 - Very good digital pianos below $2000: Yamaha YDP-163, Yamaha YDP-184, Yamaha CLP-625 (last two are IMO the best under $2000), Casio AP-470, Korg G1 Air, Roland HP601, Kawai CN-37 and CA-48.
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Reddit
reddit.com › r/piano › best digital piano €2-3000
r/piano on Reddit: Best digital piano €2-3000
August 6, 2023 -

Hello everyone!

I would like to ask for some help and advice.

We have a six year old piano enthusiast and we’d like to get a good piano for home. The budget is about 2 to 3 thousand Euros. It has to be upright, not a wing due to space constraints. We’re not sure if it’s better now for the beginning to buy a cheaper piano and later upgrade it, or to invest more now and keep it for longer. There’s so many options that it’s really difficult for someone who has no knowledge of pianos to choose… and every shop gives different advice. The teacher recommended Roland LX-705. We liked Yamaha CSP series for the “educational system” which seems more fun. But we really don’t know. I also looked at Kawai which even has some certification program for children.

Could anyone please help?

Thank you in advance

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Reddit
reddit.com › r/piano › best digital piano under 2000 eur
r/piano on Reddit: Best digital piano under 2000 EUR
July 14, 2020 -

Hello, I'm looking for a new digital piano.

I want to use it mostly over speaker and without headphones. My current piano is not just a piano, I use it as a MIDI Keyboard to send data to my DX7 and receive and play the sound that is returned. So, AUX IN and MIDI OUT are nice to have, but not a must. If the piano doesn't come with AUX IN, the budget would shrunk by 200 EUR since I would have to buy speakers (I do not like this option as I would have more stuff standing around).

In the last days, I went to the music store and played a little bit on different digital pianos (but some of the interesting ones weren't available due to the ongoing chip shortage).

Here are some of my thoughts, maybe you can lead me into the right direction:

Yamaha:

  • YDP-164: heavy keys, I don't really mind the weight but they do not feel very good; sound is okay (and does not have the ports)

  • P-515: I loved playing it but hated the speakers, they are too thin, I felt like I'm playing a keyboard

  • CLP-725: sound is okay, keys are too light

  • CLP-735: not available :(

  • CLP-745: keys are better than the ones on the 725 but not as good as on the 515, hated the sound, the notes in the middle sound like if you set the upper bass in the EQ to high, the sound on the 164 next to it appealed much more to my ears (the shop assistant said, it the sound could be impacted by having a wall behind the piano, in the store it just stood against the back another piano) (and it's out of the price range, but I incorporated it to somehow interpolate the 735)

  • NU1X: way too expensive, liked everything about it, served as reference

Roland:

  • I'd prefer the 164 over all the Roland pianos I tried ranging from 1k-2k

Kawai:

  • CA-59: too expensive, but was the only one (except the KDP-120) they had, I'm really not sure what to think about it. Better than Roland, the keys are not too light but I think I'd prefer the 515, the sound was good

I initially entered the store to decide between the 164 and the 735 too think whether spending 1000 additional EUR makes sense.

164>725, 515>164, 745>725, 745 ? 515, CA59>725, CA-59 ? 164, NU1X>(CA-59 / 745 / 515)

Thanks for your help!

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Piano World
forum.pianoworld.com › ubbthreads.php › topics › 3616035 › re-digital-piano-with-the-best-touch-under-2000.html
Digital piano with the best touch under $2000? - Piano World Piano & Digital Piano Forums
Originally Posted by BellymanNow if I could get a keyboard feel I liked just as well and a lighter weight that still gave me the function I need, I'd look at it. It's probably why that ES920 keeps coming back into my view. As a fellow lover of the PHA-50, I've found a second-best love in t...
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Reddit
reddit.com › r/piano › $1000(ish) digital/acoustic piano recommendations?
r/piano on Reddit: $1000(ish) digital/acoustic piano recommendations?
October 14, 2023 -

Looking for a new piano that costs around AU$1000 (US$650).

I'm not a beginner pianist but I dont know much about pianos since all Ive ever played on was the acoustic piano my great-grandparents left. I'm moving now and I cant bring it with me so I have to get another one.

Other notes to consider:

  • I am NOT a beginner pianist, I'm currently completing my Grade 8 ABRSM exams as a baseline for my proficiency.

  • I've thought about music production once and was thinking it would be nice if I could use my piano for that

  • A digital piano with a similar touch to an acoustic piano would be nice

Find elsewhere
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Reddit
reddit.com › r/piano › what digital piano would you buy for budget of $1000 - $2000 in 2022?
r/piano on Reddit: What digital piano would you buy for budget of $1000 - $2000 in 2022?
April 3, 2021 -

I'm new at piano and plan to teach myself until I get to a level where I need a teacher's ear.

I looked through the FAQ and seems like parts of it haven't been updated in 10 years.

Good keyboards under $1,000

Gigging keyboards between $1,000 to 2,000

I'm mainly interested in how piano-like it sounds and how piano-like the keys feel.

I wouldn't mind the ability to connect it to a computer and use software like Pianoteq and Synthology to get really nice piano sounds.

Thank you!

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Reddit
reddit.com › r/piano › best digital piano for studying classical - under $2,000
r/piano on Reddit: Best Digital Piano for studying classical - Under $2,000
May 7, 2017 -

I’m trying to buy a piano to practice and study on at home, I really can’t find useful information online. It all appears to be affiliate marketing vs real opinions.

Does anyone have ideas/guidance?

It looks like my best Yamaha bet is a YDP 163 (the 181 doesn’t have GH3 action).

I have never played Kawais, but they are pricey (sub 2K appears to be the low end of better Kawais). The Kawai price seems to be in the materials - I really don’t care about wood quality.

Nor have I played Rolands.

I am using this to practice, so honestly all I really care about is the action/feel (although yes it would be nice to have a Rhodes/Wurly sound).

Thank you very much!

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AZ Piano Reviews
azpianoreviews.com › home › best digital pianos under $1000 to $500 – review | go here!
Best Digital Pianos UNDER $1000 to $500 - REVIEW | GO HERE!
2 weeks ago - I do recommend all of the Yamaha’s ... do, it’s still a good beginner piano for those people who need to stay under $500 cost. Many of the digital pianos that Yamaha produces sell for over $2000 whereas most of the digital pianos produced by Casio and Korg sell for under ...
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Digital Piano Expert
digitalpianoexpert.com › home › top 10 best digital pianos under $2000 – review | sept 2025
Top 10 Best Digital Pianos Under $2000 - REVIEW | Sept 2025
September 23, 2025 - In our opinion the Kawai ES920 is more authentic as far as the “piano playing experience goes compared to any other brand and model of portable digital piano we have played under $2000…and we have played them all including Yamaha, Roland, ...
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Reddit
reddit.com › r/piano › need help buying a piano
r/piano on Reddit: Need help buying a piano
December 28, 2023 -

I’m playing for about 5 years and considering to buy a new piano. Right now I have a crappy Russian acoustic piano that someone who didn’t need it gave me, it works but it’s not the best.

By budget is $2,000. I know it’s not a lot for a piano, but that’s what I can invest as I’m 17. Should I keep the piano I have, buy an acoustic piano or buy a digital piano? Are there digital pianos in this budget that really feel like a real piano when you play them? This is really important to me. One plus of digital piano is that I won’t have to tune it at all (never tuned my piano and it sounds bad), but the sound won’t be the same as an acoustic one (although mine doesn’t sound the best).

Also suggestions of specific models would be appreciated, thanks!

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Well. There’s a little bit to it. Any digital piano that has excellent weight and hammer action for a “real” piano feel is most likely going to put you back anywhere from $3k to $6.5k. That said, there are plenty out there that are in the $2k range. I will tell you that there are no “perfect” digital pianos that mimic an acoustic feel, no matter how much money you spend (or at least not that I have found). You will definitely want to go test as many as you can in person — don’t rely on reviews solely online. You really have to just decide if portability, convenience, privacy, etc. are important to you and outweigh the “perfect feel”. Digital pianos give you the option to quickly rearrange them, use headphones for immersive sound, etc. and require no maintenance. I personally always prefer acoustic, but my digital stage grand has lasted me about 12 years now and is only just now showing signs of wear. I bought it for around $2800. I’ve used the hell out of it and it keeps me practicing. I’m glad I did buy it when I did, because I’ve moved around a LOT since then. An acoustic would have been a major pain to move around, not to mention I went from a house to apartment a few times and would have not had the space for acoustic. If you don’t care about any of that, then I would buy something like a Yamaha P-125 for $999, save the other $1k and keep saving until you can afford a good acoustic! This way you only spend half, you can keep saving, and you can keep practicing on something that will be a bit more reliable.
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I’m both a pianist (20 years) and a piano tuner (in training). The pianist side of me, while having a preference toward acoustic pianos, also recognizes the benefits of a good digital piano. I grew up with an acoustic, then when my wife and I got married we got a decent digital piano (Roland RP-102) for $1700 I believe, and we’ve used that for several years. The weighted touch system on it is pretty good, and the voicing is actually really good for a budget digital piano. It’s great being able to adjust volume with young kids sleeping, and lots of fun to play with different instrument settings. I’d definitely recommend it as a budget option. That being said, I’ll always prefer an acoustic piano. At church I play on a 7 foot grand, so I’d much rather have an acoustic to practice on at home so I can focus on the music and not a bunch of settings. I recently picked up a free piano that was in okay condition, and I’ve been working on getting it back into good shape. I spent maybe 3 hours tuning it, and about 5 hours on getting it to play and sound the way I like it, and that’s with almost no experience. A tuning will usually run you $150-$200 depending on your area, and regulation would be about $120/hour, so an experienced technician could probably get it sounding fairly decent for under $1000, assuming it doesn’t need any actual repairs. Once it’s in good shape, if you have your tuner back once a year to keep it in tune and do any minor regulation, you’d be looking at another 5-10 years before you hit your $2000 budget. One caveat though is if you move it yourself you risk knocking it out of tune and regulation, and if you get a company to move it for you it will run a sizeable bill. It cost $600 to move my free one into my house from 15 kilometres away. So ultimately it depends on what’s important to you. TLDR: I’d recommend getting a technician to take a look and give you a quote on getting your acoustic back into good shape. An acoustic will give you more authentic sound and lets you focus on the music, but does come with some upkeep costs. A good digital will cost more up front, but will never sound and feel the same as an acoustic, and there’s no maintenance costs unless a component gets fried (get a surge protector!). If you get an acoustic and you move somewhere else, make sure you budget to either have the piano brought back into tune, or get a reputable company to move it for you.
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Reddit
reddit.com › r/piano › digital piano in price range 750-1000$ with the best keys (coming from an acoustic piano)
r/piano on Reddit: Digital piano in price range 750-1000$ with the best keys (coming from an acoustic piano)
July 11, 2022 -

I want to make a gift to my mother, she is a piano teacher and there are some moments where a piano at home would really help, especially when you have students and easy access to it at home. We didn't especially get an acoustic one since the room it's gonna stay in, it would be bad for the wood, plus the fact that you can wear headphones and not disturb the neighbors and such.

The main thing that I'm looking for are the keys, their action and their feel. I currently have a Kawai ES110 which I absolutely love, I think the sound is the best in this price range (with headphones of course). The problem is that coming from an acoustic piano to this one, the keys are quite different. First of all they're a lot easier to play because of the action, and second, they're pretty slippery because of the material. That's why I want something as close as the acoustic keys in the price range. The sound does not matter since I can always get a VST with headphones for her that'll fix that problem.

When I was searching 2 years ago for a piano for myself, I remember that everyone said the Roland FP-10 and FP-30 had the best keys (ivory feel and and the best action in this price range). And that's what I want to go for. I'll take her to the piano shop and let her try the FP-30.

Question for you guys tho, there's no better option in terms of key quality in this price range right? Or let's say I set the price range up to about 1250$, would there be an option that'll be dramatically better? Again, I don't care about features (except MIDI and Headphones), the keys are the most important.

Thanks in advance.

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Reddit
reddit.com › r/piano › what budget digital pianos would you recommend for someone who's advanced?
r/piano on Reddit: What budget digital pianos would you recommend for someone who's advanced?
March 2, 2024 -

I can only find youtube videos for "beginner" keyboards, most of which don't have 88 keys, weighted keys, and/or a good sustain pedal. What would you guys recommend?

Top answer
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Hi! I’m not an advanced player, probably more toward intermediate - but I got the Roland FP-30x and it’s more than enough for my skill level. It has 88 keys, all are weighted (kind of on the heavier side). It comes with a crappy sustain pedal but you can order a better one separately and use it instead. It sounds beautiful. It has 256 note polyphony so I feel it should be able to handle long sustained runs with tons of notes. It also has record, playback, Bluetooth MIDI, and 56 voices. Idk if you’d consider it budget, it’s a bit of an investment but I do know they also have the FP-30 which is a bit cheaper and only comes at the cost of less voices, a bit less polyphony, and it doesn’t have Bluetooth Audio (still has BT MIDI). They both have the same hammer action tech in the keys so they should feel identical when playing at least. All in all I have loved my FP30x and I plan to have it for as long as it’ll run. I chose this over the Yamaha p145 because it was a bit less expensive but I know that’s also a very good keyboard from what I understand.
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88 keys, weighted keys, and/or a good sustain pedal. Those things take money to include, so if you're looking under a certain dollar amount (~$400) they don't exist. There are some okay-ish weighted keyboards for around $400-$500 (yamaha p145). Around $600-$700 gets you a nicer keybed (Roland fp10/fp30). Around $900-$1000 you start to get either better onboard speakers and sound (fp60, kawai es120), or stage piano features (fpe50, casio px s3100, dgx670). Around $1600-$2000 you finally get realistic keybeds that can handle most advanced classical rep (p525, fp90) or moderately robust stage piano features (ck88, rd88). Beyond that you can get both a great keybed and stage piano features, nice furniture style digitals, or eventually hybrid instruments starting somewhere around five grand or so.
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Reddit
reddit.com › r/piano › recommendations? looking for a digital piano in the $1k-$2k cad range
r/piano on Reddit: Recommendations? Looking for a Digital Piano in the $1k-$2k CAD Range
August 13, 2024 -

Hey everyone,

I'm currently in the market for a digital piano and could really use some advice. My budget is between $1,000 and $2,000 CAD, and as an advanced player, I'm hoping to find something that meets the following criteria:

  • 88 keys

  • Headphone jack for quiet practice

  • MIDI input for connecting to a computer

  • A realistic feel similar to an acoustic piano

  • A good-looking design (if it's possible)

If anyone has experience with digital pianos in this price range or any recommendations, I’d greatly appreciate your input. Any advice would be really helpful!

Thanks a lot!

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Reddit
reddit.com › r/piano › best digital piano for ~$1000?
r/piano on Reddit: Best digital piano for ~$1000?
February 13, 2022 -

Prolly a really frequently asked question, but I've been doing research for some months now and am going to finally buy a digital piano soon.

Selling off my upright piano (Kawai NS-10) to get a digital piano for better space management.

Been thinking of getting the Roland FP-30X but are there other better pianos within the same price range? The speakers can be dogshit for all I care because I'm gonna play it with headphones 99% of the time.

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Reddit
reddit.com › r/piano › what's the best digital piano with weighted keys for beginners under a 1000$ budget?
r/piano on Reddit: What's the best digital piano with weighted keys for beginners under a 1000$ budget?
February 23, 2023 - Same goes for this piano, none I've played in stores come close to the quality of the ES520. ... Touch, sure. Sound, not so much. ... When it comes to sound, P125 was a clear winner for me. But I still preferred ES120 over FP30X. More replies More replies ... This. So much this. Amazing digital pianos for the price.
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AZ Piano Reviews
azpianoreviews.com › home › digital pianos under $2000 to $1000 – review | best models 2026
Digital Pianos Under $2000 - $1000 - REVIEW | Top models 2025
2 weeks ago - There are many new model digital pianos being offered by the top piano manufacturers these days and sometimes it can be very confusing as to what the best digital piano is for a particular price range. I have written this blog article (and others) to help out people looking for good cabinet model digital pianos between $1000 – $2000. I also have done a review comparison of new digital pianos under
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Reddit
reddit.com › r/piano › looking for digital piano suggestions which have the most realistic weighted keys, closest to an acoustic piano.
r/piano on Reddit: Looking for digital piano suggestions which have the most realistic weighted keys, closest to an acoustic piano.
June 5, 2023 -

All of the 'reviews' when I google seem to be written by bots. My daughter is an advanced player and she gets frustrated her Casio Privia PX-160CSU doesn't feel like a real piano and it throws her off during performances. I can't have her banging away on a real upright 4 hours per day, it's too loud. Any suggestions?

Update: We tried out everything at my local Guitar Center and she liked the action on the Yamaha DGX-670 the best, better then the Roland FP-90x or anything else they had. She's going to school this fall and will have anytime access to practice time on nice real pianos. Maybe once day we'll help her buy a $5k+ unit if she wants to do this professionally but she thinks the DGX-670 will do for home use. Thanks for all the advice.

Top answer
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I went from a Roland FP-10 (Same action as the FP30) to an acoustic. Maybe it’s because I am a beginner and it was my first time playing an acoustic, but there was so much difference I felt like I had to relearn. I guess my takeaway was that if you buy a digital piano, probably best to accept it’s not going to feel like a real piano unless you spend big bucks Also my Yamaha U1 has a practice pedal, which adds enough damping to make it super quiet, might be worth considering that, or a silent kit Hope this helps
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I recently bought a Roland FP-90x after carefully choosing between it and a kawai es920. Both were nice, and many say the kawai is more realistic, but I enjoyed the Roland more. I play classical music and have an acoustic and wanted something I could practice without bothering my family. A few things to consider: I would stick to Yamaha, Roland, or Kawaii Used pianos from craigslist and reverb websites are cheaper and often in great condition. This will allow you to get something that is ~$2k new for <$1500. All the models I was interested in were about $2k new. Each company has many different models and product lines, but usually only one or two different mechanical actions. You should investigate the specifications of each model. For example, Roland sells pianos up to 5 or 10 thousand dollars, but their premier keyboard action is in the fp-90x which is $2k. Roland only has two keyboard actions across all their ~20 different models. With the others you are primarily buying large speakers and chassis. With headphones on, my use case, the experience is literally the same. I learned classical piano on a Roland digital instrument and it was good enough. In fact, there were features that supported my learning that wouldn't have been available otherwise. For example, used to carefully record one hand and then play the other and vice versa. I do also believe though that none of these are actually "just as good" as an acoustic piano unless you are looking in the $10k range, like the Yamaha avantgrand, which basically an acoustic piano with the strings removed and sensors instead. Even then, for the same money I think I would prefer the acoustic. However, it's also true that even mid-level keyboards will feel and sound better than most of the crappy acoustic pianos that are free on craigslist.