Casio
PX-S5000
$1,299
Casio PX-S5000: a clear digital piano review for practice and comparison
Casio PX-S6000: a clear digital piano review for practice and comparison
Where to Buy
MSRP
$1,999
Retail prices change, so check current pricing at retailers.
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| Factor | This Piano | Points |
|---|---|---|
| Base Score | — | 3.0 |
| Lesson Function | No | +0 |
| App Connectivity | Yes | +1.5 |
| Recording | Yes | +1 |
| Metronome | Yes | +0.5 |
| Transpose | Yes | +0.3 |
| Layer / Split | Yes | +0.3 |
| Preset Songs | 0 | +0 |
| Sound Variety | 400 sounds | +0.5 |
| Factor | This Piano | Points |
|---|---|---|
| Base Score | — | 2.0 |
| Headphone Jacks | 2 | +2 |
| Headphone Type | 6.3mm, 3.5mm | +1.5 |
| Headphone Optimization | Yes | +1.5 |
| Key Action Quietness | Smart Scaled Hammer Action | +0 |
| Volume Control | Yes | +1 |
| Bluetooth Audio | Yes | +0.5 |
| Factor | This Piano | Points |
|---|---|---|
| Base Score | — | 5.0 |
| Weight | 11.2 kg | +1 |
| Width | 1322 mm | -0.5 |
| Battery | No | +0 |
| Foldable | No | +0 |
| Key Count | 88 keys | +0 |
| Factor | This Piano | Points |
|---|---|---|
| Key Action Quality | Smart Scaled Hammer Action (grade 6) | +3.6 |
| Key Count | 88 keys | +1.5 |
| Polyphony | 256 notes | +1.5 |
| Sound Modeling | Multi-Dimensional Morphing AiR | +0.5 |
| Key Surface | ivory-feel | +0.5 |
This Casio PX-S6000 review reads the published specifications from a comparison-first point of view: touch, sound, practice fit, value, and limits.
Casio PX-S6000 is best read as a portable digital piano for players who already practise regularly. This review looks at weighted-key feel, sound, practice features, value, and realistic comparison points instead of treating the spec sheet as advertising copy.
Casio PX-S6000 is a portable digital piano that makes most sense when its strengths are matched to the right practice situation. The useful points are 88 keys, weighted hammer action, 256-note polyphony, 16W speakers, and a weight of 11.2 kg. In a digital piano review, those details matter more than broad claims about being the best digital piano overall. For home practice and stage use, this model can be a sensible candidate if the layout and feature set match the way the instrument will actually be used. It is still worth comparing as a current buying candidate. The fairest comparison is with models in the same price and use class, where touch, speakers, headphone practice, and connectivity can be judged side by side.
Casio PX-S6000 uses a weighted hammer action. For a digital piano with weighted keys, the important question is not only whether the keys are heavy, but whether they help steady daily practice. The ivory feel key surface is a useful comfort detail. The specification lists 256-note polyphony; that is enough for ordinary pieces, while more layered playing or heavy pedal use benefits from a higher number. This makes the key action a practical comparison point rather than a decorative specification.
Casio PX-S6000 is most relevant for players who already practise regularly. The main use case is home practice and stage use. Strengths: portability and easy placement. Limits: the need for a furniture-style living-room instrument. Buyers comparing digital pianos should also check the stand, pedal, headphone jack, app support, and local availability before deciding.
Casio PX-S6000 offers 400 sounds and 16W speakers. That is the sound side of the review: enough variety for practice, but the real experience depends on speaker power, headphone use, and the room where it will be played. The headphone output supports quiet practice. For lessons, apps, or recording workflows, the useful connectivity is USB MIDI, Bluetooth and app support.
Before buying Casio PX-S6000, compare it with nearby alternatives on touch, sound, portability, and value. A stand may need to be budgeted separately. A damper pedal is included, though some players may still want a fuller pedal unit. It is still worth comparing as a current buying candidate. For searchers looking for a Casio PX-S6000 review, the practical conclusion is to treat it as one candidate in a digital piano comparison, not as a universal answer for every player.
| Keys | 88 |
| Key Action | Smart Scaled Hammer Action |
| Polyphony | 256 notes |
| Sounds | 400 |
| Weight | 11.2 kg |
| Speakers | 16W (×4) |
| Bluetooth | Audio + MIDI |
| Key Surface | Ivory Feel |
| Sound Modeling | Multi-Dimensional Morphing AiR |
| Headphone Jacks | 2 |
| Headphone Type | 6.3mm, 3.5mm |
| Headphone Optimization | Yes |
| USB MIDI | Yes |
| Line Out | Yes |
| Lesson Function | No |
| App Connectivity | Yes |
| Recording | Yes |
| Metronome | Yes |
| Transpose | Yes |
| Layer / Split | Yes |
| Preset Songs | 0 |
| Battery | No |
| Foldable | No |
| Dimensions (W×D×H) | 1322×232×102 mm |
| Stand Included | No |
| Pedal Included | Yes |
Spec terms are explained in the glossary. Glossary →
Enter the space you have and we'll check it against this piano's footprint.
Enter your available space above to check the fit.
A sturdy X-stand or furniture-style stand is essential if one isn't included.
Closed-back headphones with good bass response make practice sessions more enjoyable.
The included pedal is usually basic. A half-damper pedal upgrade is worthwhile for expressive playing.
An adjustable-height bench helps maintain proper posture during long practice sessions.
MSRP
$1,999
Retail prices change, so check current pricing at retailers.
These buttons open retailer search results and may include affiliate tracking where available. Stock and listing status can change without notice.
The PX-S6000 scores higher in portability, while the ES920 is stronger in beginner support, piano-like touch and value for money. The ES920 costs $100 less. Choose the PX-S6000 if portability matters most.
Kawai ES920 →The PX-S6000 scores higher in portability, while the P-S500 is stronger in beginner support, piano-like touch and value for money. The P-S500 costs $400 less. Choose the PX-S6000 if portability matters most.
Yamaha P-S500 →The PX-S6000 scores higher in portability, while the FP-90X is stronger in beginner support and piano-like touch. The PX-S6000 costs $301 less. Choose the PX-S6000 if portability matters most.
Roland FP-90X →A console digital piano is the closest thing to an acoustic upright you'll find without tuning and hammers. With a fixed cabinet, built-in three-pedal unit, and speakers voiced for the room, it behaves like a piece of furniture first and an instrument second. This guide explains what separates a great console from a middling one, which features actually matter at home, and which models deliver the best balance of touch, tone, and craftsmanship.
Read more →A church piano has a harder job than a home piano. It needs to cover hymn accompaniment on Sunday morning, lead a praise set on Saturday night, back a choir rehearsal midweek, and survive the move between sanctuary and youth room. This guide explains what matters most in a worship context — reliable sounds, simple controls under stage lighting, clean connection to the sound desk — and which models serve that role without overspending. It also addresses when a stage piano or an arranger keyboard is a better fit than a standard digital piano.
Read more →Classical piano demands more from an instrument than almost any other style. The keybed has to respond to the lightest whisper and the heaviest chord. The pedals have to behave like those on an acoustic grand. The sound engine has to hold up under close listening. This guide focuses on digital pianos that can genuinely support serious classical study, from late beginners through to conservatory-bound players, and explains what really matters when you compare them.
Read more →You've played for a year or two. You can read music, hold a rhythm, and tackle pieces beyond the beginner books. You're also starting to notice where your current piano holds you back — usually the key action and the dynamic range. This guide is for players ready to leave the entry level. It explains what an intermediate-grade instrument actually changes, which specs matter now that you can hear the difference, and which models hit the sweet spot between price and real musical return.
Read more →A synthesis of recurring points from price-comparison sites, Amazon reviews, music-store staff videos and forum threads. Not a star-rating average — we read across multiple reviews and pulled out the points that came up repeatedly.
The Casio PX-S6000 is a higher portable that adds more voices, four speakers, two headphone jacks and sound-shaping knobs to the same slim body as the PX-S5000. Across specialist review sites, most of the discussion praises the fuller feature set and the quality of headphone practice, while reviewers also note that the slim-body key feel divides opinion, that the speakers can distort at high volume, and that its pricing is hard to place.
A wide range of voices and effects
Reviewers value the much larger voice count and the way the knobs let you adjust filter and reverb at your fingertips. Players who want to range widely beyond piano sounds are especially welcoming.
High-quality headphone practice
With headphone optimisation on board, reviewers report a sound with real depth even for evening practice. The two jacks, which let two people listen at once, are also considered practical.
Good spread of sound for a slim instrument
The four-speaker layout and the room-matched sound-field adjustment draw the assessment that it projects well for a slim instrument.
A softer key contact
Compared with the entry-level PX-S1100 the cushioning has increased, and long-term users report less fatigue over long playing sessions. The common view is that it plays fine once you get used to it.
The key feel divides opinion
Because of the slim body, the key pivot sits closer to the front, and reviewers repeatedly note that pressing toward the back of the keys is a little harder to play. The touch is also on the light side, so the standard advice is for players tackling classical repertoire seriously to try it beforehand.
The speakers distort easily at high volume
Turning up the volume tends to make the built-in speakers distort, so for large venues reviewers recommend pairing it with an external amplifier.
Its place in the price range is awkward
With a price close to the upper bracket, some reviewers say it is hard for intermediate players to reach on budget. It is also compared directly with the similarly priced Kawai ES920 and Roland FP-60X.
No battery operation
Unlike the PX-S5000 it does not run on batteries and always needs mains power, which is raised as a weak point for taking it out and about.
Specialist review sites
Outlets such as PianoDreamers mainly credit the fuller voices, connectivity and headphone experience, while pointing to the slim-body key-pivot issue and recommending a try-out where possible.
Retailer reviews and videos
Retailer outlets such as Sweetwater and Thomann tend to value the breadth of features and voices in a slim format from a practical standpoint.
Head-to-head comparisons (vs PX-S5000 / ES920 / FP-60X, etc.)
In side-by-side playing, the feature set is held to be much fuller than the PX-S5000, while the keys lack the depth of heavier models.
Net take
On balance, the PX-S6000 is a model praised in overseas reviews for its features, as an instrument that fills out the voices and headphone experience while staying slim. Its breadth of voices, knob-based sound shaping, and headphone optimisation with two jacks are the central points in its favour. That said, the slim-body key feel tends to divide opinion, and speaker distortion at high volume and the lack of battery operation are worth keeping in mind. If key touch is your priority, the similarly priced Kawai ES920 and Roland FP-60X are also worth comparing.
We do not compute a numeric star average. The points below are recurring themes we identified by reading across multiple reviews.
This page is written by the operator, who has run the piano-learning site Piano Juku since 2017, based on published manufacturer specifications. We are not a retailer or tied to any maker — every model is compared by the same criteria. About the operator
How the 5-axis scores are calculated
We do not aggregate user reviews or star ratings (see methodology for why).
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