As a local company, we care for your home as if it were our own and are happy to help your piano find its new home.
1 | SUBMIT AN INQUIRY
Use this form to provide more information about your piano. A salesperson will contact you after your information has been reviewed.
2 | GET AN OFFER
After our team has evaluated your piano, we will make you an offer based on your piano's condition and resale value. A consignment agreement will be sent to you.
3 | SCHEDULE A PICK-UP
After the consignment agreement has been signed, we will schedule a time to pick-up your piano and transfer it to our showroom.
4 | RECEIVE YOUR CHECK
After your piano has been sold, we will send you a check within 30 days.
We are specifically interested in the following piano brands:
Please understand that we cannot use:
Piano manufacturing is, by its nature, a materials-intensive craft. A modern grand piano contains roughly 12,000 individual components. It requires carefully selected hardwoods — spruce, maple, beech, walnut — sourced from forests in multiple countries. It uses felt, leather, metal alloys, and chemical finishes. Building one well takes skilled labor spanning months.
In January 2026, the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas included something that would have seemed out of place a decade ago: a piano technology exhibit generating genuine buzz alongside the televisions, smartphones, and AI gadgets that dominate the show floor. The products on display — connected instruments, app-integrated learning systems, multi-device MIDI setups — weren't novelties. They were the direction the piano industry is heading.
For years, the piano world operated on a fairly clean division: acoustic instruments for those who could afford the space and maintenance, digital pianos for everyone else. That division has been eroding steadily, and by 2026, it has given way to something more interesting — a category of instruments that refuses to sit neatly on either side of the line.