
Over 30 new and secondhand restored boudoir grand and baby grand pianos for sale.
New grand pianos by
Wendl and Lung, Feurich and Yamaha.
Restored grand pianos by Bluthner, Bechstein, Steinway, Yamaha, Lipp, Chappell, Challen, etc Please see stocklist for photos and details.

Over 70 new and secondhand restored upright pianos for sale.
New pianos by Wendl & Lung, Feurich and Yamaha.
Modern pianos by top makes including Steinway, Knight, Welmar, Seiler, etc.
Traditional restored upright pianos by the following makes: Bluthner, Bechstein, Lipp, Broadwood, Chappell, Challen, Gors & Kallmann, etc.

There are currently over 10,000 names of pianos.
Our "further restoration" page has a
list of the most common secondhand ones available in the UK , with a rating out of 100. Pianos are almost unique in that their mechanical design has hardly changed for over 120 years. Spare piano parts are in 99% of the cases identical to the original. A top quality older grand piano, when new, would often have cost as much as a house!
Expertise ran high until after the second world war when the piano trade began to thin out.

As an example of the care taken in manufacture of a top quality European piano,
Grotrian Steinweg today use the finest timber in the soundboard construction on their new pianos.
Bavarian Alpine Spruce is felled when 200 to 350 years old and then dried and cured for ten years before use! This cannot be done cheaply. Mass produced cheap modern pianos vary but generally use relatively un-cured pine or plywood. The soundboard is the most important constituent, being the engine of the piano, but the same contrast in quality is reflected in the whole manufacturing process.
There are a few European piano makers, such as Wendl and Lung, who are working in partnership with Chinese factories to produce good quality pianos.
If you would like further information, please see the
restoration and
advice pages

Grand and upright pianos for sale can be divided into two main categories - traditional and modern style.
The best traditional English and
German pianos were made around 1895 to 1940. (Some traditional style makes like Welmar and
Bosendorfer were excellent through to 1959 and beyond.) The best modern style pianos were made from 1960 to 1980. After that the philosophy of cheap mass production gradually took over, and instead rather than making a piano to last; a vast quantity of new pianos are now produced, few of which can be successfully reconditioned, and many of which will develop problems in the future.
It follows that buying a top quality older restored piano from 1890 to 1940 or a little used modern piano from 1960 to 1980 is often the best choice, and certainly preferable to a cheap new one. With a budget, say, of £3000 it is much better to buy a top quality little used second hand upright piano than a new one, even if the new piano is heavily discounted, and with £7500 to spend on a grand piano, there are excellent second hand ones that are far superior to a heavily discounted new one which may officially retail at as much as £12,000.
Please see our other web pages for more details information.