Digital Piano Series Guides
Model names are easier to understand once you know the series. These pages organize major digital piano families by purpose, touch, speaker design, and buying tradeoffs.
Yamaha
Yamaha P Series Digital Pianos
Yamaha's P Series is the portable home-practice line: compact 88-key models that prioritize simple setup, familiar Yamaha piano tone, and enough weight for lessons without a cabinet.
View seriesYamaha
Yamaha Arius YDP Series
Arius YDP is Yamaha's fixed-cabinet home line below Clavinova. It is about a stable furniture setup, three pedals, and a piano-first experience for lessons.
View seriesYamaha
Yamaha Clavinova CLP Series
Clavinova CLP is Yamaha's higher home-piano line, aimed at players who want stronger key action, richer speakers, and a more acoustic-like cabinet experience.
View seriesRoland
Roland FP Series
Roland FP models are portable 88-key pianos with a strong reputation for compact cabinets, headphone practice, and PHA-family key actions.
View seriesRoland
Roland RD Series
Roland RD is the performance line for stage players, with hands-on control, outputs, lightweight options, and EX variants for expanded piano sounds.
View seriesKawai
Kawai ES Series
Kawai ES models are portable home pianos built around Kawai's touch-first reputation, from the entry ES60 to the more expressive ES920.
View seriesKawai
Kawai KDP Series
Kawai KDP is the beginner console line where cabinet stability and Kawai's compact hammer actions matter more than flashy features.
View seriesCasio
Casio Privia PX Series
Casio Privia PX covers slim portable models and compact home cabinets, often winning on size, modern features, and value.
View seriesCasio
Casio Celviano AP Series
Celviano AP is Casio's cabinet-piano line, now spanning slim AP-S models and more traditional AP cabinets.
View seriesKorg
Korg Grandstage Series
Grandstage is Korg's flagship stage-piano concept, focused on multiple sound engines, real-time control, and professional outputs rather than home practice features.
View series