A used piano can be a wonderful deal — or an expensive mistake that's hard to get rid of. Before you accept that "free" piano from a neighbour or buy one online, here's what's worth checking.
A piano kept in a stable, climate-controlled home has usually aged far better than one stored in a basement, garage or against an exterior wall. Ask how old it is, when it was last tuned, and whether it's ever had repairs. A piano that's been tuned regularly is a good sign someone cared for it.
The most important parts of a piano — the pinblock that holds tuning pins, the soundboard, the bridges — are hard for a buyer to assess by eye. A piano that won't hold a tuning because of a worn pinblock can be effectively unrepairable. If the piano has any real value to you, a pre-purchase inspection by a technician is money well spent; we can tell you in one visit whether it's worth bringing home.
Budget for professional movers (pianos are heavy and easy to damage) and a tuning after it settles in your home — a piano almost always needs tuning once it's moved. Factor those into the "free" price.
Be cautious with very old uprights of unknown history, anything stored in damp conditions, and pianos a seller is desperate to give away with no detail. Sometimes the kindest outcome for a tired piano isn't your living room. When in doubt, ask us first.
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