
Highlights
- Pianos are lovely musical instruments that happen to be extremely difficult to move due to their enormous weight, considerable size, and surprising fragility.
- Pianos are also rather expensive and can be super valuable too, so you wouldn’t want to see your piano damaged in any way.
- The thing is that even though they look sort of indestructible, pianos are exceptionally delicate and can easily get ruined during a move.
- Follow these detailed steps to learn the best way to move a piano by yourself – that is, without hiring piano movers.
Some statements are so obvious that saying them out loud can often cause people to roll their eyes or maybe even answer back in a sarcastic way. The sun rises from the east, The Pacific Ocean is deep, and Pianos are difficult to move to another house can make people look in disbelief at the person who has just uttered these enlightening words and shoot back, No kidding!
However, rash and inconsiderate sarcasm aside, some home movers end up wishing somebody had told them the above piano statement before they underestimated the big challenge and attempted to move a piano by themselves.
Because that’s exactly what moving a piano feels like – a relocation challenge of mammoth proportions that only a home mover with
- previous relocation experience,
- a bunch of reliable friends,
- proper moving equipment,
- a suitable moving vehicle, and
- anti-risk taking behavior
can pull it off with satisfactory results.
After all, when moving a piano by yourself, you run the risk of saying your farewells to any of these 4 essential things in your life:
- your health – possible minor or major injuries,
- your money – paying for repair works to restore your damaged property or broken musical instrument,
- your time – any failure to reach your goal will be counted as lost time, and
- your piano – any untimely damage inflicted on your precious instrument will directly influence the rest of the above-mentioned fundamental factors when moving a piano to another home.
With the purpose of saving you from big troubles and helping you handle the extremely difficult task ahead of you, we have prepared the following practical DIY Piano Moving Guide.
So, how to move a piano by yourself in the safest way possible?
Why are pianos so difficult to move?
Together with a pool table, a hot tub, and antique furniture, a piano is one of the top contenders for the Most Difficult Things to Move prize due to its weight, bulkiness, and complexity.
Weight: How much do pianos weigh?
Even toddlers know that pianos are heavy, but few people actually are interested in knowing why pianos are so heavy and exactly how much they weigh. Regardless of the piano type, the substantial weight comes from the fundamental internal component that holds the strings together – a solid harp made of cast iron.
Additionally, both the soundboard and the entire piano casing /usually made of solid wood/, not to mention the numerous mechanical parts inside, add up to the staggering weight of a piano.
- Spinet pianos: even the smallest upright pianos available on the market can weigh between 300 lbs. and 400 lbs.;
- Large upright pianos: their initial weight is about 500 lbs., but due to their variations, they can easily reach 800 lbs. or even more;
- Grand pianos: weighing up to 1,000 lbs., or sometimes even more for some specialized models, grand pianos are the hardest ones to move from one house to another due to their one-of-a-kind bulkiness too.
Size: Just how bulky and awkward are pianos for moving?

Moving a piano to another house, or even moving a piano to another room is never that simple.
In fact, it’s a rather complicated and delicate process because, besides the weight, the other factor that troubles the whole process is the awkward bulkiness of these lovely musical instruments.
Upright pianos tend to be rather tall, while grand pianos are notorious for their odd shapes. One troublesome problem in particular, even when moving a piano across the room, is the impossibility of distributing evenly the extreme weight of the instrument.
As a result, slight shifts in any direction can lead to much larger and unpredictable shifts in the overall balance and weight of the piano, thus making it extremely difficult to turn and maneuver the instrument around tight corners and steep stairs without personal injuries, property damage, or costly structural damage to the piano itself.
Fragility: Are pianos really so delicate?
Yes.
Pianos are not only incredibly sophisticated mechanical musical instruments (some models are said to contain more than 7000 finely tuned moving parts), but they are also very delicate.
Damage to a piano being moved from point A to point B can come from practically anywhere and the extent of that physical harm may vary greatly – from minor damage (superficial scratches and casing cracks) through medium damage (broken legs, broken keys) to serious damage (ruined sound or playing mechanisms).
Are you up to the piano moving challenge?
Having in mind the information so far, if you’re not well prepared for the piano moving challenge, you run the risk of damaging your precious instrument forever – it might never be the same again even when repaired. You really need to think about whether you are up to the task before seriously considering moving your piano by yourself.
Your safest bet to protect your valuable instrument, your (more) valuable property, and your most valuable possession of them all (your health!) is to leave the Herculean task to specialty piano movers who have the extensive experience, proper training, and required know-how to move a piano in a perfectly safe way.
Thanks for the tip on how to move a piano, especially about making sure to protect the siding with padding. I have had to help a lot of people move, and I must say that pianos are one of the hardest things to move. Although the ones I helped move were not the best or the newest, I would have to say that unless you had some serious muscle to help out, having someone who knows how to do this would help a lot.
It is interesting for me to learn a little bit about how to move a piano. I have a couple of friends buying a piano and they need my truck to move it. I always thought that having a professional piano mover would make it a lot smoother. Now, I know that I can move it safely by myself.
Thanks for the article! I found it very helpful.
Great post! It's worth looking into someone other than "Uncle Dave" to move your piano
Its really hard to move a grand piano. Thanks a lot for writing this article. It helped me a lot in shifting it to a nearby place.
Josh,
Since I am an amatuer mover I still have questions as to the exact location of the parts of the piano you’ve referenced in your article.
“bass clef” “treble clef” ???
Also, It seems you didn’t begin your steps from the piano’s “set up” position ( I’m referring, in particular, to a baby grand as in the top picture.)
Step 6 says not to lay it on it’s “side” yet in the picture it is on it’s side while on the dolly?
I need step by step diagrams (or video) along with written explanations in order to dispell any questions.
Also, for a baby grand that will be transported long distance, should it be packed in the moving truck on it’s edge as in the top and 4th picture, or flat on it’s legless bottom?
Bass=left side of the keyboard
Treble=right side
Grand pianos travel on edge (and so do their owners). They go very first into the truck and get strapped in before anything else loads.
I wanted to thank you for helping me understand more about moving a piano and what it takes to move it. It was interesting to read that grand pianos can weigh up to 1000 lbs because of how specialized and intricate the design and materials are. I have been thinking about getting a grand piano for our family since we all love to play the piano; however, we will definitely need movers to come and take care of it for us if we ever move. Thanks for the post!
Tomorrow I am helping my mom move out of her house and in to my brothers house. For years she has kept a beautiful grand piano in her main room. It makes me anxious thinking of moving it on my own; that thing is insanely heavy. I was so glad to read your section on the risks of moving a piano alone; it helped me make my mind up. I don’t want to risk it. The risks outweigh the benefits. I will be sure to find a company who is more qualified to do moves like this.
I have to move my upright piano 5 feet into another room since we are having the room re carpeted. Should the flooring where the piano is being moved to have special covering to protect the hardwood? What would be the best floor covering?
I didn’t realize that pianos are difficult to move because they are delicate as well as complex, with some pianos having more than 7,000 moving parts. This makes me think I should look into a piano removalist when my family moves across the state. We will start looking into them so that we can safely move the antique grand piano my grandmother left me.
This is a very well written post. Everything is very concise and clear. Thanks for sharing.
I never knew that pianos have over 7,000 moving parts, which makes it tough to move. My wife and I are moving to a new city this summer and I’m worried about how we’re going to move our nice piano. We’ll have to hire professional movers to safely move our precious piano for us.
Great Post about piano moving. Thanks for sharing.
Thank you for talking about how moving a piano in the same room or another in the same house is easiest to do by yourself. My cousin is moving to live by us and has a piano. I will suggest to her to find a reputable piano moving company.
Thank you for explaining how it’s important to cover the piano in furniture blankets. I hadn’t even considered that when thinking about how to move our piano. I’ll be sure to talk to everyone and see if we can find some to use for our move.