Real numbers, including ours. Most studios make you book a call to find out what lessons cost. Here’s the whole market in one page — group classes to private studios — and exactly where this studio sits in it.
Group classes ($20–40 per session). Community programs and group piano classes are the cheapest entry point. You share the teacher’s attention with 5–15 other students, so progress depends heavily on self-direction between sessions. Good for testing curiosity; slow for building real skills.
Music school private lessons ($35–55 per 30 minutes). Larger schools schedule you with a teacher on staff. Quality varies with who you happen to get, and teacher turnover means you may restart with someone new mid-year. Half-hour formats also spend a meaningful share of each lesson on warm-up and recap.
Marketplace platforms (average around $50–60 per hour). Online marketplaces list hundreds of Chicago teachers at wildly different price points. The platform takes a cut, vetting is thin, and the listed price often climbs once travel or studio fees are added.
In-home lesson services (roughly $100–150 per hour). A teacher comes to you — genuinely convenient for families with young kids. Pricing reflects the travel and convenience as well as the teaching. You’ll need your own instrument at home, and the format is a great fit for busy families who value the time savings.
Established private teachers ($80–150 per hour). Dedicated studios with experienced, credentialed teachers. This is where serious students end up, and it’s the tier this studio competes in.
Every lesson is 50 minutes, one-on-one, in person at the Ukrainian Village studio (acoustic piano, Fender Rhodes, Hammond B3) or online via Zoom. No registration fees, no contracts, and pack credits are valid one year from purchase.
Single lesson: $125. · 4-Lesson Pack: $450 ($112.50/lesson) · 8-Lesson Pack: $850 ($106.25/lesson) · Semester Pack: $1,600 ($100/lesson, 16 weeks, your weekly slot reserved all term). New piano students can start with a $25, 30-minute trial — and trial students get first access to fall lesson slots before enrollment opens to everyone else.
Full details and enrollment are on the pricing page.
Four things move the number: lesson length (30-minute lessons look cheaper but cost more per minute of real instruction), teacher credentials (competition winners and certified specialists price above hobbyist teachers), the room (a professional studio with real instruments versus a living room), and continuity (a dedicated teacher who keeps your file versus whoever the scheduler assigns this term). Cheap lessons that don’t stick are the most expensive kind.
Expect $20–40 per class for group programs, roughly $35–55 for a 30-minute private lesson at a music school, around $50–60 per hour on marketplace platforms, $100–150 per hour for in-home services, and $80–150 per hour for established private teachers. At Music with Nick, a 50-minute private lesson runs $100–$125 depending on the pack.
Usually, yes. Weekly cadence is what produces progress, and packs price that commitment in: at Music with Nick the per-lesson rate drops from $125 (single) to $100 (Semester Pack). All pack credits stay valid for a full year, so a missed week never costs you a lesson.
It varies: some offer free consultations, some charge full price from lesson one. Music with Nick uses a $25, 30-minute piano trial — long enough to actually play and get a feel for the teaching, priced so the studio attracts students who are serious about starting.
Often not — the teacher's time and preparation are the same. At Music with Nick, Zoom lessons and in-person lessons at the Ukrainian Village studio are the same rate, and students can alternate between the two.
Voice lessons in Chicago price similarly to piano at every tier. At Music with Nick, voice students start with a free 15-minute call instead of a trial, because a productive first voice session needs a full 50 minutes.