The Kawai NV6 looks like a digital piano but plays like an acoustic instrument. The reason sits under the keys: instead of a simulated keyboard, the NV6 holds a real Kawai wooden hammer action, the kind found in the brand acoustic pianos. The tone is then produced not by a tensioned string but by a digitally recorded concert grand.
That combination is exactly what the word hybrid means. In this spotlight we explain what sets the Kawai NV6 apart from a pure digital piano and from an acoustic piano, and who the step up to a hybrid is worth it for.
01What hybrid means on the Kawai NV6
A hybrid piano combines two worlds. The first is the action: the NV6 holds the Kawai Millennium III Hybrid action, with long wooden keys and a real hammer movement. This action comes straight from Kawai acoustic piano building, adapted for the digital body. Optical sensors read the movement of each hammer rather than simply switching a key on or off.
The second world is the sound. Instead of strings and a soundboard, the NV6 uses a digital sound engine based on the Kawai SK-EX concert grand. The result: the hand feels an acoustic touch, the ear hears a recorded top grand. There are no strings, so there is nothing to tune.

02NV6 versus a pure digital piano: the feel
The most noticeable difference from an ordinary digital piano lies in the touch. A good digital piano simulates the hammer action with weighted keys and clever springing, but it remains an imitation. The NV6 simulates nothing: the action moves real hammers, and the keys pivot on the same long fulcrum as on an acoustic piano.
For advanced players this makes an audible and tangible difference in dynamics, repetition and fine touch control. Anyone coming from an acoustic instrument finds a familiar feel on the NV6 without giving up the benefits of digital technology. Our Digitalpianos category shows further models.
| Feature | Digital piano | Hybrid (NV6) | Acoustic piano |
|---|---|---|---|
| Action | simulated, weighted | real wooden hammer action | real hammer action |
| Sound | digital | digital (grand sampling) | acoustic via strings |
| Tuning needed | no | no | yes, regularly |
| Quiet practice | yes, via headphones | yes, via headphones | limited |
| Footprint | compact | compact | larger |
03NV6 versus an acoustic piano: quiet practice and compact living
Against an acoustic piano, the NV6 plays its digital strengths. It can be played at any time through headphones without disturbing neighbours or family. That makes it the natural choice for a rented flat, a terraced house or late evenings.
On top of that: no tuning appointments, no sensitivity to dry heating air or room climate, and a more compact footprint in the upright body. Anyone who wants a genuine piano feel but shies away from the upkeep and space of an acoustic instrument finds the middle ground in a hybrid.
04NV6 or NV12: the larger model
The NV6 is the upright model of the Novus range, with a compact body. Anyone after the experience of a grand looks at the larger Kawai NOVUS NV12 - Das revolutionäre Hybrid-Flügelerlebnis. It carries a real grand action, with the longer pivot and touch of a concert grand, in a deeper grand-style cabinet.
In short: the NV6 brings a high-quality piano feel in compact form, while the NV12 brings the grand experience into the living room. Both share the digital sound engine and the benefit of quiet practice.


The Kawai NV6 is made for demanding players who want a genuine piano feel while practising quietly in compact living space. It closes the gap between a digital piano and an acoustic piano, with no tuning and no strings.
Frequently asked questions
Does a Kawai NV6 need tuning?
Does the NV6 have a real piano action?
Can you practice quietly on the NV6?
What is the difference between the NV6 and the NV12?
Discover the Kawai Novus NV6
Take a look at the NV6 and its larger sibling in our range.
View the Kawai NV6All digital pianosPassende Produkte
Kawai Novus NV-6 Hybrid Piano Black Polished
Kawai NOVUS NV12 - Das revolutionäre Hybrid-Flügelerlebnis