If you are shopping for a first digital piano, three names come up fast: the Roland FP-30X, the Kawai ES-120 and the Casio PX-S1100. All three are portable beginner instruments in the same price class, and they are the best sellers for good reason. This beginner digital piano comparison shows where the three really differ and who each model is the right choice for.
The short answer first: there is no single best unit, but three clear brand philosophies. Roland focuses on a realistic key feel and full connectivity, Kawai on a calm, acoustic-like action with a warm tone, Casio on the slimmest body with modern design. We will walk through the decision points one by one.
01The keyboard: realistic key action compared
On a digital piano, the hammer action decides how close the playing feel is to an acoustic piano. The three makers take different routes here.
The Roland Stagepiano FP 30x BK - schwarz matt uses the PHA-4 Standard action with escapement and an ivory-feel surface. It is regarded as firm and textured, clearly noticeable under the fingers. The Kawai Stagepiano ES 120 relies on the RHC action (Responsive Hammer Compact), known for its calm, even touch that plays close to acoustic without mechanical noise. The Casio Stage Piano PX S 1100 - Schwarz works with the Smart Scaled Hammer Action, whose keys are individually weighted, heavier in the bass and lighter in the treble, with simulated ivory and ebony key tops.
Who it suits: if you like a firm, textured keyboard, Roland will feel right. If you prefer a quiet, even touch, reach for Kawai. Casio impresses with a surprisingly authentic action in the slimmest body.
02The sound: three tonal philosophies
All three models use sampling technology based on high-grade concert grands, yet they sound different.
Roland uses the SuperNATURAL sound engine, which models the behaviour of an acoustic grand and responds very vividly to playing dynamics. Kawai brings the sound of its own concert grands into the ES-120, often described as warm and balanced, which suits classical players in particular. Casio delivers a clear, present tone that carries well even through the internal speakers.
Which one sounds nicer is a matter of taste. More important for a beginner: all three sound at a level that is more than enough for years of practice.
03Size, weight and design
This is where the biggest visible difference shows. The Casio PX-S1100 is the slimmest 88-key digital piano in its class and, thanks to its shallow depth, fits even small flats or stores away easily. It also looks the most modern, with a touch-sensitive control surface.
The Roland FP-30X and Kawai ES-120 are built a little larger and heavier, which also makes them feel more solid and stable under firm playing. If you move the instrument often or have little space, the Casio wins. For a fixed setup, size matters less.
All three can be turned into a fixed home instrument with a matching stand, or kept mobile on an X-stand.
| Feature | Roland FP-30X | Kawai ES-120 | Casio PX-S1100 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Key action | PHA-4 Standard, ivory feel | RHC, calm and acoustic-like | Smart Scaled Hammer, ivory/ebony |
| Sound engine | SuperNATURAL | Harmonic Imaging, Kawai grands | Casio concert grand samples |
| Speakers | strong 22 W system | clear, comparable level | 2 x 8 W, present enough |
| Form factor | solid, medium depth | solid, medium depth | ultraslim, very flat |
| Bluetooth | MIDI and Audio built in | MIDI built in | Audio built in, MIDI via adapter |
| Character | realistic feel, versatile | warm, acoustic-like | compact, modern design |
04Connectivity and app support
On connectivity, the Roland FP-30X makes the fewest compromises. It offers Bluetooth for MIDI and Audio and has a full USB audio interface that lets you record straight into recording software with no extra gear. That makes it the obvious choice if recording or app-based lessons matter to you.
The Kawai ES-120 offers built-in Bluetooth MIDI for connecting to learning apps, but skips the full audio interface. The Casio PX-S1100 streams audio over Bluetooth from a phone through its own speakers, but Bluetooth MIDI needs an optional adapter.
For plain practice this hardly matters. But if you want to record or work intensively with apps, the Roland is the most flexible.
05Which model for whom
Three clear recommendations emerge.
The Roland Stagepiano FP 30x BK - schwarz matt is the right choice for anyone who wants a noticeable key action and maximum flexibility in connectivity and app support, for lessons, recording or future expansion. The Kawai Stagepiano ES 120 suits players for whom a calm, acoustic-like touch and a warm tone matter most, often classically minded beginners. The Casio Stage Piano PX S 1100 - Schwarz is ideal when space is tight, the instrument moves often, or a slim, modern design tips the balance.
You will find all three in our Stage Pianos collection. If you are still unsure about the basic form factor, also have a look at the Digitalpianos collection, which includes cabinet models too.
You can start playing piano with any of these three instruments. The decision is not about quality but about priorities: keyboard and connectivity with Roland, touch and sound with Kawai, size and design with Casio. Once you know your three key criteria, the right model is quick to find.
Frequently asked questions
Which digital piano is best for beginners?
Do all three models have 88 weighted keys?
Which of the three is the most compact?
Can I connect the pianos to learning apps or a computer?
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