Kimball is a brand most people associate with common household uprights and consoles, not premium grand pianos. That is exactly why the Kimball Viennese Classic line surprises people. It is one of the few Kimball sub-lines that gets discussed, listed, and searched as a premium “hidden gem” style piano.
If you are researching one, you are probably asking:
- What is a Viennese Classic, and how is it different from a typical Kimball grand piano?
- How do I identify one?
- Is it actually good, or is it just marketing?
- What should I inspect before buying?
This guide answers those questions and sets you up to make a smart decision.
What is the Kimball Viennese Classic line?
The Viennese Classic is a higher-tier Kimball grand piano line that is frequently described as being influenced by Bösendorfer design ideas from the era when Kimball owned Bösendorfer.
In the used market, you will often see Viennese Classic instruments described as “patterned after the Bösendorfer 200” or “built on a Bösendorfer-style scale.” That language shows up repeatedly across dealer descriptions and piano listings.
Dealers even call it an “American Bösendorfer” as a nickname people use. Take that as a comparison point, not a literal equivalency.
To get a better sense of the brand as a whole, browse our current Kimball piano inventory and compare the models we have available.
Why the Viennese Classic matters in Kimball’s history
Most Kimball pianos in circulation were built for broad, mass-market demand. The Viennese Classic is different because it was positioned to elevate Kimball’s reputation, especially in the grand piano category.
This is why the line continues to get attention online decades later:
- People keep finding them in the wild (estate sales, churches, private sellers)
- The “Bösendorfer influence” story is memorable and heavily repeated
- Buyers want to know if it is actually worth the upgrade versus a typical used grand
How to identify a Kimball Viennese Classic
Do not rely on one label. Verify multiple signals.
1) The model and naming
Look for “Viennese Classic” or “Viennese Edition” references in the model documentation, plate markings, or seller paperwork. Sellers often mention it in listings, but you want confirmation on the instrument itself.
2) The serial number and era
Serial number dating is a big deal for Kimball buyers. People search it constantly because Kimball spans many eras and quality ranges.
If you want a reliable year, get the serial and have a professional confirm it.
3) The scale story
Many descriptions reference a Bösendorfer 200-style scale. If you are reading that claim from a seller, treat it as a clue, not proof. Then evaluate the actual instrument with a technician.
Are Kimball Viennese Classic pianos actually good?
They can be. But “Viennese Classic” does not magically override age, wear, or poor storage.
Here is the reality: a worn-out premium-line piano is still a worn-out piano.
What matters more than the label
- Tuning stability (pinblock health, torque consistency)
- Soundboard and bridge integrity
- Action condition (hammer wear, regulation potential, repetition)
- Humidity history
- Quality of any rebuild work (if applicable)
If you skip this and buy based on the story, you are gambling.
What are they worth?
Pricing is all over the place because the used market is local and moving costs distort everything. You can find dealer listings and ads spanning a wide range, even when the model name sounds similar.
A realistic valuation requires:
- Condition assessment
- Confirmation of year and model
- Your local market demand
If you are in Middle Tennessee, we can evaluate it, give you a straight answer, and also give you a quote for moving it if needed.
Where the 670P fits (quick mention)
During Kimball’s stronger eras, the company produced standout grands that people still talk about today, including instruments in the Viennese Classic family such as the 670P.
We are publishing a separate deep-dive article on the Viennese Classic 670P that includes specs, what to listen for, and a full walkthrough video.
Buying checklist: what to inspect before you commit
Bring this list to any used Viennese Classic showing:
- Ask when it was last tuned and whether it holds pitch
- Play every key. Listen for uneven tone, buzzing, dead notes
- Check action consistency (repetition, sticking, sluggish keys)
- Inspect pedals for noise and function
- Look for signs of humidity swings (rust, sluggish action, soundboard issues)
- Get a technician inspection before money changes hands
FAQ
No. People use “American Bösendorfer” as a nickname or comparison. It is not literally the same instrument.
Because many Viennese Classic descriptions reference being patterned after the Bösendorfer 200 scale design.
No. Kimball made many grands across many tiers. “Viennese Classic” is a specific line designation.
If you are considering a Kimball Viennese Classic, the fastest way to avoid a bad buy is a professional evaluation. We can confirm the era, identify key wear points, and tell you what repairs matter now versus later.




