Given the wide variety of keyboards available, finding the finest electronic keyboard for your needs can take time and effort. There’s no need to worry, though, as we’ve looked into what’s available and put together this list of the top electronic keyboards available. With the most affordable option at the bottom and the most costly one at the top, we’ve opted to arrange the guide in ascending order of price.
1. Casio WK6600
With the Casio WK6600’s touch-responsive keys that produce various sounds in response to pressure changes, you may add subtle variations to your musical notes. It brings out the composer in you with its 710 built-in tones, ten user tones, 210 preset rhythms, and auto accompaniment.
2. Kadence DP01
Kadence is a creator-focused brand that creates and manufactures instruments for everyone who wants to express themselves via, create, and play music. It is the perfect present for any music enthusiast. It is particularly suited for beginners to learn from and create with 64 polyphonies, 80 demo songs, 800 tones, and 600 rhythms.
3. Casio Privia PX-870
Play your tunes on the Privia PX-870, the flagship of the renowned Privia family of digital pianos, with a completely accurate sound and feel. It is designed to give you the impression of playing a grand piano. It boasts an elegant, contemporary look and includes a powerful, brand-new sound projection speaker system with an award-winning AiR Sound Source with a four-layer stereo grand piano vibrating with true damper resonance.
4. Artesia Performer Sleek
Eighty-eight full-size touch-sensitive keys on this Artesia Performer let you experience professional touch and sound. You may link it to your computers or tablets so you can record music straight from the piano onto the gadget. It has a built-in metronome and a transpose option for challenging keys.
5. Yamaha P125
Yamaha provides us with everything we could want in this digital piano, which weighs close to 12 kg. It has a sustained pedal and a power supply unit, making it the ideal partner for entering the professional zone. P125 includes 88 keys to play with and a panel for your music sheets, all designed to give you a seamless experience.
6. Yamaha PSS-A50
The Yamaha PSS E30, F30, and A50 are three new, lightweight models under the $100 price point, revitalizing Yamaha’s storied PSS Portasound line from the 1980s. The E30 is designed for younger children, and the F30 is for more auto-accompaniment styles. Both have quiz mode and cartoon FX. The Yamaha PSS-A50 is the best of the lot, in our opinion.
7. Casio CTK-1500 Electronic Keyboard
Last year, Casio—making keyboards for 40 years—celebrated its 40th anniversary. This full-size, entry-level model, sold in some markets under the name Casio CTK-1550, offers a wealth of functionality at an incredibly low cost.
8. Roland GO: KEYS
Over 500 top-notch sounds from Roland’s Juno DS engine are included in the fun, small, and portable Roland GO: KEYS keyboard. The GO: KEYS allows you to wirelessly control MIDI devices thanks to its battery-powered and Bluetooth audio/MIDI operation.
9. Korg EK-50L Electronic Keyboard
Entertainer Keyboard is the meaning behind the model identifier “EK” used by Korg. While the Korg EK-50 Electronic Keyboard fits the need at the lower end of the pricing range for beginning keyboardists, the new Korg EK-50L Electronic Keyboard costs a few pounds more and comes with a speaker system that is twice as powerful.
10. Yamaha Genos
The Genos, manufactured by Yamaha as a replacement for the famous Tyros line of high-end arranger keyboards, justifies its exorbitant price by sounding unique. The absence of built-in speakers, which forces you to connect it to an optional speaker set, PA system, mixing desk, or studio headphones, is what most distinguishes it from the other keyboards on this list other than the price.