Music Lessons near you in United States
Known locally as music teacher. Compare researched prices and get free quotes from pros wherever you are in United States.
Typical price: $100–$1,100
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What music lessons costs in United States
| Job size | Low | Typical | High |
|---|---|---|---|
| Monthly lessons (30 min weekly) Four 30-minute lessons | $100 | $140 | $220 |
| Monthly lessons (60 min weekly) Four hour-long lessons | $180 | $260 | $440 |
| Exam/audition prep block Ten hours toward a grade exam or audition | $450 | $650 | $1,100 |
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How to hire a music lessons pro in United States
- Match teacher to instrument and genre — classical, jazz and pop pedagogy differ
- Check credentials: music degree, MTNA membership, or strong performing/teaching history
- Ask about background checks for in-home lessons with minors
- Trial one lesson before monthly commitments
- Compare studio, in-home (10-30% premium) and online formats
- Ask about recital opportunities and practice expectations
Frequently asked questions
What are graded music exams and are they worth doing?
Graded systems (ABRSM, Trinity, RCM and others depending on country) give structured milestones from Grade 1 to 8. They're excellent for motivation and college applications, but not compulsory — many great teachers alternate exam terms with free-choice repertoire terms to keep enjoyment alive.
Should lessons be at home, the teacher's studio, or online?
Teacher's studio is usually cheapest and has the best instrument/setup. Home visits cost 10-30% more but remove the commute — worth it for families juggling multiple children. Online works surprisingly well for theory and intermediate players, less well for absolute beginners who need hands-on posture correction.
Weekly lessons or fortnightly — what actually works?
Weekly is the standard for a reason: practice habits decay fast without a checkpoint. Fortnightly can work for self-directed adults. What matters more than frequency is daily practice between lessons — 15-20 minutes a day beats a 2-hour cram before the lesson.
How long should a music lesson be?
30 minutes for children under ~10 and absolute beginners; 45-60 minutes once pieces get longer and technique work deepens; 60 minutes for exam candidates and adults. Paying for an hour a beginner child can't focus through is the most common waste of lesson money.
How much do music lessons cost?
Most private music teaching is priced per 30, 45 or 60 minutes, with 30-minute lessons standard for young beginners. Rates track the teacher's credentials (conservatory-trained and examiner-experienced teachers top the range), the instrument (rarer instruments cost more), and format — home visits add a travel premium while online lessons discount 20-40%.
What background checks should a music teacher have for teaching children?
Music teaching is unlicensed everywhere, so vetting falls to you: in some countries background checks for child-facing work are legally required (Australia's WWCC) or standard practice (UK DBS, NZ police vetting). For home-studio lessons, it's reasonable to sit in on early sessions with young children.
What do music lessons cost across the US?
Private 30-minute lessons run $25-45 and 60-minute $50-90, with major-metro and in-demand teachers at $75-120/hr. Online lessons run $20-50/hr and franchise music schools price per 30-minute slot around $30-45.
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