Match the appraiser to the instrument
Violins, guitars, brass, woodwinds, keyboards, and recording gear have different markets. Choose an appraiser or specialist who regularly handles the category you own.
- Photograph maker labels, serial numbers, model names, headstock, body, bridge, bow, case, and defects.
- Include measurements and material notes where possible.
- Do not repair, refinish, or restring valuable instruments before documenting them.
Condition and playability
Cracks, neck angle, repairs, replaced parts, finish work, warped components, case condition, and playability can all affect value. For instruments, functional condition and originality both matter.
- A repair invoice can help explain condition but does not automatically increase value.
- Case, bow, mouthpiece, pedals, or accessories should be documented separately.
Appraisal purpose
Insurance may require replacement value, while estate or sale planning may need fair market value. Tell the appraiser the intended use before the report is written.
For higher-value instruments, provenance and originality evidence should be preserved with the instrument.
Remote review prep
Send full views, closeups of labels and serial numbers, damage photos, case photos, repair records, and any known ownership history.
Need a value opinion on your musical instrument?
Upload clear photos, marks, dimensions, and condition notes. Appraisily can review the item remotely and tell you which details matter most.
Start instrument appraisal