If you're trying to find out what a piano tuning costs in Toronto, you've probably already discovered the frustrating part: almost no one publishes a price. Here's a straight answer, the reasons the number moves, and how to avoid paying for the wrong thing.
For a standard tuning in Toronto and the GTA, most established technicians charge somewhere in the range of roughly $100 to $200, with many landing around $130 to $160. The spread is wide because "a tuning" isn't always the same job β the condition of your piano, how long it's been, and where you live all change what's actually involved.
A standard tuning is the right service for a piano that's been maintained roughly once a year and is still sitting close to pitch. The technician fine-tunes all of the roughly 220 strings back to A440 concert pitch, by ear, and the visit usually takes about 90 minutes in your home. This is the baseline price most quotes refer to.
For reference, our own standard tuning is $130 + HST, published openly so you're never guessing.
If a piano hasn't been tuned in several years β or was recently moved β it often sags well below concert pitch. Once it's more than about 20 cents flat, a single tuning won't hold: bringing the strings up changes the tension across the whole frame and pulls everything back down. The fix is a pitch raise β a first pass to restore overall tension, then a fine tuning on top.
Because it's effectively two passes and more careful work, a pitch raise costs more than a standard tuning. Across the GTA you'll typically see it priced anywhere from about $180 to $250+. Ours is $195 + HST.
Some visits aren't a full tuning β you might need a technician to come assess a piano, handle a small adjustment, or advise on whether an old instrument is worth keeping. That's a service call, typically around $100 to $130 (ours is $115 + HST). It's also what applies if a piano turns out not to be tunable until it's repaired.
First, a price that seems far below everyone else's. Tuning a piano properly takes training and about 90 unhurried minutes; a rock-bottom "tuning" is sometimes a rushed job that won't hold. Second, vague pricing. A technician who won't give you a clear number before arriving is one who might surprise you on the invoice. You deserve to know the price before anyone knocks on your door.
For a well-maintained Toronto piano, budget roughly $130β$160 for a standard tuning, and more if it needs a pitch raise to come back to pitch after years of neglect. The best value isn't the cheapest quote β it's the technician who tells you the price up front, does the job properly, and helps your piano hold its tune so you're not paying for a correction next time.
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