Public pianos, near you
Train stations, streets, airports, parks: thousands of free-to-play pianos are waiting for your fingers. This map lists them, with feedback from people who actually played them. Know one we're missing? Report it.
How it works
We started this map with Europe's best-known station pianos, the ones we've seen ourselves or that the pianist community has been visiting for years. The rest is up to you: every reported piano and every comment goes through our hands before publication. It's a little slower than a wide-open site, but that's the price of a reliable map with no spam and no ghost listings.
A piano vanished, another is out of tune, a third one just got installed? Recent comments are what make this map valuable: two sentences are enough. And if the urge to play strikes before you reach the piano, our 50 free MIDI pieces are waiting, ready to rehearse in Pianovera before your public debut.
Frequently asked questions
How do I find a public piano near me?
Open the map above: every marker is a free-to-play piano reported by the community, with its description and visitor feedback. Zoom to your city to see what's around.
I know a public piano that isn't on the map. What do I do?
Click "Report a piano", place the marker at the right spot and describe it. Every submission is reviewed by hand before it appears, which keeps the map reliable and spam-free.
A listed piano is gone or in bad shape?
Leave a comment on its card: recent feedback helps everyone know whether a piano is still there and playable. Comments are moderated before publication.
Who is allowed to play a public piano?
Everyone. That's the whole point. Beginner or virtuoso, these pianos exist to be played. Just be kind: a few pieces, then give way if someone is waiting.