5 Best Violin Brands for Beginner Violinists
What’s the price of a good beginner violin?
In this article I recommend 5 brands of beginner violins and explain the differences
It can be really hard to buy your first violin, as you might not be familiar with the violin and what to look out for.
After owning a violin shop for twelve years and reviewing violins for Violin Lounge TV, I’d like to give you my top 5 and I’ll explain what you can expect for what price.
As a violin teacher I will discuss beginner violins from $ 50 up to $ 500 and will help you make the right decision for you!
Fiddlerman Violins
After I made the switch from running a violin studio and violin shop in Holland to teaching the violin online, it took a while before I found a reliable address to refer students to.
Fiddlershop.com offers good quality instruments, but what really separates them is that they adjust the violin so they are ready to play. You’ll be surprised how many webshops sell instruments that can hardly be tuned or played.
The violin is difficult enough already to learn to play, so make sure that your violin isn’t holding you back.
The Fiddlerman Concert Violin is below $ 500, made of good quality aged tone wood, ebony parts and comes with a complete set including a strong carbon fiber bow. You really can’t go wrong with this one!
Click here to watch my extensive review video and listen to it’s sound.
Tower Strings Violins
When I reviewed this violin set below $ 200 I was surprised about the good quality and playability
The set is really complete with a violin, bow, case, shoulder rest, rosin, digital tuner, mute and polishing cloth.
The playability and tuning stability on this violin is very good, as long as you buy it at Fiddlershop.com. They are a really unique webshop with professional luthiers adjusting all the instrument that leave their door.
Of course the sound is not comparable to a beginner violin of around $ 500 and you must keep in mind that this is a type of violin that you might want to upgrade when you play for a couple of years. However, that’s ok!
Watch my review video here, in which I demonstrate this violin.
Glarry Violins
Complete violin outfits below $ 50!
If you really tight on budget, but you desire to play violin, Glarry is the place to go! Starting below $ 50 they offer complete sets with a violin, bow, case, shoulder rest, digital tuner, rosin and even a spare set of strings. You’ll be ready to play!
However, please note that you can’t expect good quality wood or a high level of craftmanship. You might struggle with the bridge that doesn’t fit, strings that snap quickly or a bow that is not entirely straight.
Click here for my extensive review video!
As long as you keep your expectations not too high and can accept that some work needs to be done on this instrument, it’s of course great for value for money.
However, if it’s in any way possible to spend more, I would really recommend doing this. You can enjoy a better violin longer, it motivates you to play more and your progress will be better.
But… if you just want to dip your toe in the violin water and really don’t have more to spend, this is the best bang for your buck!
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Scott Cao Violins
Great sound, craftsmanship and playability made affordable
Scott Cao’s are one of the best student violins you can get for the price. They offer a beautiful tone quality, flamed maple and spruce and are varnished by hand.
In my violin shop days I’ve sold them very often and I always liked playing on them. As they offer a rich tone, it’s possible to play them for many years as you make progress on the violin. You’ll really have a unique hand made instrument.
Because of the oil finish, this instrument will look beautiful for many years and the varnish won’t chip or splinter as quickly as a high gloss spray finish.
The pegs and fingerboard are made of strong wood, ensuring a good tuning stability and general reliability of your instrument. You can enjoy this investment for a very long time without worries!
ARS Music Violins
These are the violins that I’ve been renting out for years in my violin shop. They offer amazing good quality, European craftmanship and materials for a surprisingly low price.
Currently they aren’t being sold online, but I’ll keep you up to date as soon they are!
Let me know in the comments below which violin you like best!
You might also find my article ’32 Checks to Buy a Violin’ interesting :).
Scott Cao instruments are fabulous! I honestly don’t let students play on Instruments that cost under $100 on various sites including e-bay. I believe tone is incredibly important to begin teaching from day 1 and those $50 objects don’t work. Most shops allow families to pay rent which is put toward the purchase of a larger instrument. Therefore, I make sure that the shops I recommend have quality full size instruments. I also prefer local shops (I’m in cleveland area) so that repairs and adjustments can be easily made. Lots more to say about this topic!
Yes, I can certainly imagine. I’ve imported good violins from Czech a lot for my students. Outside the tone there’s a lot more wrong with instruments below $ 100. I think there are so many people buying a Violin Shaped Object, noticing that nothing works and giving up the violin. However, there are great webshops that do offer good instruments and service.
I really love my Ars Music violin. As I progress in playing the violin lets me do that and the sound evolves with me. It is a great adventure we both are in.
Glad to read that, Anka 🙂
Love the Fiddlerman Artist!
Good to read that, James, can you describe it’s sound?
What do you think about Kennedy Violins? Particularly their $200+ clearance violins. See the link for reference:
https://kennedyviolins.com/products/bunnel-premier-violin
Thanks, I will check them out!
I purchased a Guiliani Etude violin on clearance from Kennedy violins and it seems reasonable, had it maybe 18 months. It came set up with D’Addario Prelude strings. The bow was iffy, so I asked KV for the Guiliani carbon weave bow, which doesn’t cost much more than the brazilwood bow, but for me the carbon fiber bow was much easier to deal with, and just a better tool overall, and with my ability, it’s perfectly fine. You can produce good tone with it, it stays in tune in a moderate environment, and the DP strings take a beating. I think it’s a good starter up through advanced beginner, at the very least, no problem. I also have a Cecilio CVA-500 viola that’s a little cheaper, and it definitely wasn’t setup as well, although I was surprised it was playable (without extra work or dealer prep) for a $180 viola. It also came with DP strings, but I had to get a Fusion CF viola bow from Shar to match it up with. The supplied $20 Cecilio bow was a tad heavy and fatiguing. Don’t deal with Kennedy unless you already have some experience. They make delivery mistakes, sending wrong or faulty equipment at times, but if you let them know, they always make it right. I believe in my experience that they are reputable. Also, fwiw, the clearance violin they sent me was not any problem, if they didn’t call it a clearance item, I wouldn’t have picked up on the fact that it was; my issues were with bows and accessories. One other thing, do not rely on the humidity dial in the cases. Unfortunately, not good. Good luck to you!
Thanks for sharing your experience, Gary, I’m sure it’s useful to those looking to buy their first violin :).
What about ‘Mendini MV300’?
I haven’t played that, so couldn’t tell!
I wanna buy a violin.So which one would be the best among these 5?
I’d say go for the Fiddlerman Concert!
Nice to see you putting a plug in for the Fiddler Shop. They’re a fine bunch. I had a Scott Cao once and was ignorant of violin quality. I tried to sell it to a co-worker for $100. I think I got $20 and the payments stopped. Probably went to a Pawn shop. Oh well , we learn late sometimes, don’t we?
Oh yes, that’s a lesson indeed! Didn’t you like the Scott Cao?
I’m completely new with the violin and I’m 61 years old. My son played the violin but hasn’t picked it up for a couple of years so I’m borrowing his violin. How can I tell who made this violin, there is no name on the violin.
Maybe take it to a violin shop or luthier to have it identified. I can’t tell from here.
Hey. So I am a violin newbie and I started out in panic caused by some online friends buying a violin, I have always been fascinated by the violin, shape and sound, so now I had to own one. I bought my violin last summer and jumped into it and found melodies I wanted to learn.
My violin is a beginner an Arvada v-180 4/4 and I do have my struggles also with the bow, I changed the strings, new rosin, new bows, but I do consider a carbon fiber bow instead of wood.
I am thinking of a new violin but which one will you recommend at a decent price?
Love from
Anne Svendsen
Hi Anne, just answered you over at YouTube. A bow upgrade would serve you well. Think about something like this. Good wooden bows are a lot more expensive and the carbon ones are very decent at a low price point. I’m not familiar with the Arvada violins.
I was searching Violin Brands for me when I Came Across on your post, Awesome you’ve reviewed all the Best Violin Brands in details and your post helped me a lot. Thanks keep it
Wonderful!
I know this is technically about violins, but the same design and quality considerations apply to violas as well. My first viola (which I’m still using three years later) is a Cecilio CVA-600, which is probably comparable to their CVN-600 violin and is a higher-end model. It cost only a few hundred dollars, but it’s great quality. Currently, I am using a Vingobow carbon fiber bow and D’Addario Zyex strings. This viola has excellent tuning stability, remaining perfectly in tune even when I took it to a rehearsal on a rainy day. It also sounds excellent for a beginner instrument — my first viola teacher commented on how great it sounded compared to most of the violas he encountered, and I’ve even played it in concerts with my local orchestra.
That being said, I also have a lower-end Cecilio CVN-200 violin, which costs about $100. It’s cheaper price certainly shows — I don’t really like its tone (it sounds overly bright on the low G string and has an overall bland tone), and I probably wouldn’t want to take it to a concert. It’s probably not a good pick. The CVN-600, on the other hand, would be an excellent investment if it’s anything like the CVA-600 viola.
Thank you for sharing!
which of the two 4/4 would you recommend Fiddlerman Master vs Yamaha V10G?
I haven’t tried them both, but it’s also personal. Listen to some sound samples and decide which sound you like best. I know that they are both good quality instruments.
Hello, is there an alternative to fiddlershop for a buyer in Europe? I’m in Spain and custom fees are extremely high. I’d like to buy a violin for around 200 euro and start your course. 🙂
Yes, you could look at the Stentor II at Thomann (click here) for example.