1st Note

Yamaha

Yamaha P-145BT Review

Yamaha's compact beginner piano with Bluetooth Audio

88 Keys 11.1 kg graded hammer compact Beginner

Scores

6.3 5.5 5.5 5.4 5.7 Beginner Night Practice Portability Touch Reality Value

Beginner

6.3

Night Practice

5.5

Portability

5.5

Touch Reality

5.4

Value

5.7

Where to Buy

MSRP

$550

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.

Model variants

Yamaha P-145 family

The P-145BT is the Bluetooth Audio variant of the P-145 platform. Treat it as a variant with a separate search intent, not a completely unrelated model.

Variant pages case-by-case
P-145 Available
Difference P-145 P-145BT
Database status Published product page Published product page
Positioning Base compact beginner model Bluetooth Audio version of the P-145 class
Bluetooth Audio No Yes, varies by area
Core specs 88 keys, 64-note polyphony, 10 voices, USB to Host 88 keys, 64-note polyphony, 10 voices, USB to Host
SEO handling Main indexed page for the platform Indexed variant page for Bluetooth Audio search intent
Sources
How These Scores Were Calculated

Beginner

6.3
Factor This Piano Points
Base Score 3.0
Lesson Function No +0
App Connectivity Yes +1.5
Recording No +0
Metronome Yes +0.5
Transpose Yes +0.3
Layer / Split No +0
Preset Songs 21 +0.7
Sound Variety 10 sounds +0.3

Night Practice

5.5
Factor This Piano Points
Base Score 2.0
Headphone Jacks 1 +1
Headphone Type 3.5mm +0.5
Headphone Optimization No +0
Key Action Quietness graded hammer compact +0.5
Volume Control Yes +1
Bluetooth Audio Yes +0.5

Portability

5.5
Factor This Piano Points
Base Score 5.0
Weight 11.1 kg +1
Width 1326 mm -0.5
Battery No +0
Foldable No +0
Key Count 88 keys +0

Touch Reality

5.4
Factor This Piano Points
Key Action Quality graded hammer compact (grade 5) +3
Key Count 88 keys +1.5
Polyphony 64 notes +0.4
Sound Modeling Yamaha CFX sampling +0.5
Key Surface matte +0

How was this calculated? — Read our methodology

Yamaha P-145BT review verdict

This Yamaha P-145BT review focuses on published specifications, practice use, and comparison context rather than sponsored rankings.

The P-145BT keeps the simple, beginner-friendly Yamaha P-series formula and adds Bluetooth Audio so you can play songs from a phone or tablet through the piano's own speakers.

Pros

  • Bluetooth Audio lets you play along with songs, lesson videos, and backing tracks through the built-in speakers
  • GHC weighted keyboard gives a graded hammer feel in a slim, easy-to-place body
  • 64-note polyphony and 10 core voices keep the instrument focused on piano practice instead of menus
  • USB MIDI supports learning apps and basic computer recording workflows
  • At just over 11 kg, it is realistic to move between rooms or store upright when space is tight
  • Yamaha's Smart Pianist and Rec'n'Share support make daily practice easier for beginners

Cons

  • Bluetooth is for audio playback, not Bluetooth MIDI control
  • Only one 3.5 mm headphone jack is provided
  • No onboard recording function or built-in lesson mode
  • Stand and three-pedal unit are separate purchases
  • The speaker system is useful at home but not strong enough for performance

The P-145BT is best understood as the P-145 concept with one practical upgrade: Bluetooth Audio. That addition matters because beginners often practice with external audio, and using the piano as the playback speaker makes the setup cleaner. It does not turn this into a feature-heavy digital piano, and players who need recording, split/layer performance setups, or stronger speakers should look higher in the range. But for a compact home piano that feels like a real step up from a keyboard, the P-145BT is a sensible modern entry point.

Yamaha P-145BT review details

Yamaha P-145BT key action and touch

The GHC keyboard is Yamaha's compact graded hammer action. The lower notes feel heavier and the upper notes feel lighter, which helps beginners learn dynamics in a way that transfers more naturally to an acoustic piano. It is not as refined as Yamaha's higher-end actions in the P-225 or Clavinova line, and fast classical repertoire will reveal that difference. For early lessons, chords, basic reading practice, and quiet evening playing, the action gives enough resistance to build useful habits while keeping the body slim and light.

Who the Yamaha P-145BT is for

The P-145BT is for someone who wants a first real weighted-key piano but also wants the practice routine to feel modern and easy. If you learn from YouTube, a phone app, or downloaded backing tracks, Bluetooth Audio removes a small daily annoyance because the accompaniment can come from the same speakers as the piano. It is still a simple instrument: there are no arranger features, no flashy screen, and no deep sound editing. That is the point. For an adult beginner, a returning player, or a family buying one piano for shared practice, it gives the useful Yamaha basics without turning practice into a setup project.

Demo Video

Source: Better Music Watch on YouTube ↗

Specifications

Keys 88
Key Action Graded Hammer Compact
Polyphony 64 notes
Sounds 10
Weight 11.1 kg
Speakers 14W (×2)
Bluetooth Audio

Recommended Accessories

🪑

Stand

Stand not included (sold separately)

A sturdy X-stand or furniture-style stand is essential if one isn't included.

🎧

Headphones

Closed-back headphones with good bass response make practice sessions more enjoyable.

🎹

Sustain Pedal

The included pedal is usually basic. A half-damper pedal upgrade is worthwhile for expressive playing.

💺

Bench

An adjustable-height bench helps maintain proper posture during long practice sessions.

Where to Buy

MSRP

$550

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.

How It Compares

P-145BT vs P-145

The P-145BT scores higher in Night Practice and Touch Reality. The P-145 costs $90 less. Choose the P-145BT if you prioritize quiet practice.

Yamaha P-145 →

P-145BT vs CDP-S110

The P-145BT scores higher in Night Practice, while the CDP-S110 edges ahead in Touch Reality. The CDP-S110 costs $101 less. Choose the P-145BT if you prioritize quiet practice.

Casio CDP-S110 →

P-145BT vs ES60

The ES60 edges ahead in Portability and Touch Reality and Value. The ES60 costs $51 less. Choose the ES60 if you prioritize portability.

Kawai ES60 →

Related Guides

88 Keys vs 61 Keys: Which Digital Piano Size Is Right?

The number of keys on a digital piano seems like a simple spec, but the decision affects how you learn, what you can play, and how much you spend. The honest answer isn't "always get 88" — it depends on your goals. This guide walks through who genuinely needs a full keyboard, who is better served by fewer keys, and what the practical differences look like in daily practice.

Read more →

Best Console Digital Pianos for the Home (2026)

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 →

Best Digital Pianos for Church and Worship Use (2026)

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 →

Best Digital Pianos for Classical Music (2026)

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 →

Best Digital Pianos for Intermediate Players (2026)

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 →

Best Digital Pianos for Kids (2026 Parent's Guide)

Kids don't need the most expensive piano — they need the right one for where they are now. A piano that feels appropriate for small hands, fits in a child's room, and includes features that make practice feel like play will keep your child engaged far longer than an overbuilt flagship. This guide helps you match the instrument to your child's age, attention span, and level of commitment.

Read more →

Best Digital Pianos Under $1,000 (2026)

The $500–$1,000 range is where digital pianos get genuinely good. This is the sweet spot — where key actions start to feel convincing, speakers become room-filling, and you get features that actually matter for your progress. If you can stretch your budget to this range, you'll get an instrument that can carry you from your first lesson through years of playing.

Read more →

Best Digital Pianos Under $2,000 (2026)

Under $2,000 is where digital pianos start feeling genuinely serious. You move beyond entry-level plastic into refined key actions, nuanced sound engines, and builds that will satisfy intermediate players for years. This guide explains what changes at this price, what to prioritize when options open up, and the models that deliver real value in a crowded segment.

Read more →

Best Digital Pianos with Bluetooth (2026)

Bluetooth has become a standard feature on digital pianos, but what it actually does varies more than most buyers realize. Some models support only wireless app connections. Some stream audio from your phone through the piano's speakers. Some do both, and a few handle neither well. This guide walks through exactly what Bluetooth gives you on a digital piano, where the catches are, and which models deliver a clean wireless experience.

Read more →

Best Portable Digital Pianos for Travel & Small Spaces (2026)

Sometimes you need a piano that goes where you go. Whether you're gigging, traveling, teaching at multiple locations, or simply don't have room for a full console, portability matters. But lighter doesn't always mean better — the trade-offs between weight, key quality, and features are real. This guide breaks down exactly what to look for in a portable digital piano.

Read more →

Best Stage Pianos for Gigging Musicians (2026)

A stage piano is a different kind of instrument. It lives in a gig bag, loads into a venue, and has to sound professional the moment you plug in. Unlike a home digital piano, the priorities shift to portability, durability, and the controls you can reach mid-song. This guide walks you through what actually matters when you play out — and which models hold up night after night.

Read more →

Digital Piano Buying Guide: Everything You Need to Know (2026)

Buying a digital piano can feel overwhelming. Hundreds of models, confusing specs, and marketing jargon make it hard to know what actually matters. This guide breaks down everything you need to understand — in plain language — so you can make a confident decision.

Read more →

Digital Piano vs Acoustic Piano: Which Should You Buy?

The choice between a digital piano and an acoustic piano comes down to more than just preference — it's about your home, your budget, your practice habits, and your long-term goals. Both are legitimate instruments for serious piano study, and modern digital pianos have closed the gap dramatically. This guide lays out the real differences so you can decide which belongs in your home.

Read more →

Digital Piano vs Keyboard — What's the Difference? (2026)

"Should I buy a digital piano or a keyboard?" It's the most common question beginners ask — and the most confusing, because the terms get used interchangeably even by music stores. They're actually quite different instruments designed for different purposes. This guide cuts through the marketing noise and explains exactly what separates them, when each one makes sense, and which you should buy based on your actual goals.

Read more →

Graded Hammer Action vs Weighted Keys: What's the Difference?

"Weighted keys" and "graded hammer action" are two of the most common terms you'll see when shopping for a digital piano. They sound similar but refer to different things. This guide explains exactly what they mean, how they affect your playing, and which type you should look for.

Read more →

Best Quiet Digital Pianos for Apartments (2026)

Living in an apartment doesn't mean giving up piano. Digital pianos were practically made for this situation — plug in headphones and the world disappears. But not all models are equally quiet. Key noise, headphone quality, and late-night optimization features vary widely. This guide helps you find the right piano for peaceful apartment practice.

Read more →

Sources & transparency

Last verified
Data referenced from
Manufacturer official Official press release Authorized retailer ×2

How the 5-axis scores are calculated

We do not aggregate user reviews or star ratings (see methodology for why).

Spot a mistake or have a question about what's on this page? Let us know and we'll review it.

Suggest a correction

Similar Pianos

Closest in the same lineup

Same brand and the same product category, sorted by smallest price gap.

Yamaha

P-143

$500

88 weighted keys at Yamaha's most affordable price

4.1 Beginner 5.0 Night Practice 5.5 Portability 6.2 Touch Reality 5.4 Value
88 11 kg
View details

Yamaha

P-145

$460

Yamaha's best-selling beginner piano, refined

6.3 Beginner 5.0 Night Practice 5.5 Portability 4.9 Touch Reality 5.9 Value
88 11 kg
View details

Yamaha

P-225

$749

The P-145's big brother — same reliability, more features

8.6 Beginner 8.0 Night Practice 5.5 Portability 6.2 Touch Reality 6.6 Value
88 11.5 kg
View details

Alternatives from other brands

Different makers in the same category and a similar price band, ranked by how closely the spec-based scores match this model.

Kawai

ES60

$499

Kawai's lightest ES portable brings SK-EX piano tone under $500

6.4 Beginner 5.5 Night Practice 6.0 Portability 6.2 Touch Reality 6.4 Value
88 11 kg
View details

$449

Slim, light, and surprisingly capable

6.2 Beginner 4.5 Night Practice 5.5 Portability 6.0 Touch Reality 6.1 Value
88 10.5 kg
View details

Kurzweil

KA-120

$500

A pro brand's budget piano — Kurzweil quality at $500

8.6 Beginner 5.5 Night Practice 5.5 Portability 5.3 Touch Reality 6.5 Value
88 12 kg
View details

Search retailers

Yamaha P-145BT