Your first trumpet.
A buyer's guide for parents, beginning students, and band directors making their first purchase. Three brands, three price tiers, the things that actually matter and the things that don't.
The three brands a band director will actually recognise.
For a first Bb student trumpet in 2026, three names dominate American school programmes: Yamaha (specifically the YTR-2330 / YTR-200AD lines), Bach (the TR300 student line and the iconic Stradivarius for step-up), and Conn-Selmer (Conn 22B, Selmer 1605). If your band director hands you a list, these are the names that will be on it.
The reasons are simple. School programs need three things: the trumpet has to play in tune, it has to survive a fifth-grader's case-drop, and the local repair tech has to keep parts in stock. The three brands above clear all three bars. Lesser-known brands may sound just as good — but the band director's repair tech may not have valves for a Jupiter when one breaks during marching season.
Three price tiers, three buyer profiles.
Tier 1 — Student ($350–$700)
The Yamaha YTR-2330, Bach TR300, or Conn 22B. These are the trumpets every American beginning band program rents. Yellow brass, plain finish,.459" bore. Built to last six years in a backpack. If you are buying for a child age 8–14 with no track record yet, this is the tier.
Tier 2 — Step-up / Intermediate ($1,000–$2,500)
The Yamaha YTR-4335, Bach TR450, Getzen 590-S, Conn Connstellation. For a student who has played 2–3 years and is committed. Better intonation, better resonance, often gold brass leadpipe. The sound difference between Tier 1 and Tier 2 is noticeable to any listener, including the band director sitting six rows back.
Tier 3 — Professional ($2,500–$5,500+)
The Bach Stradivarius (37, 43, 72), Yamaha Xeno (YTR-8335), Schilke B-series, Adams Custom. For audition-tier high school students, conservatory players, freelance pros. The Stradivarius alone has been the American orchestra trumpet for sixty years.
The mouthpiece matters more than you think.
A mediocre trumpet with a great mouthpiece often outplays a great trumpet with a stock mouthpiece. Budget at least $80–150 for a Bach 7C, 5C, or 3C — the three sizes most American players start on. If you can afford only one upgrade, this is it.
The mistakes first-time buyers make.
- Buying online without a try-out. Even at the student tier, two trumpets of the same model can play differently. Find a local shop or buy from a return-friendly seller.
- Underestimating the case. A flimsy case kills more student trumpets than valve oil ever did. Spend the extra $40 on a real Pro Tec or Bam case.
- Overpaying for "antique" or "vintage" trumpets. Old does not mean good. Many vintage trumpets need $400+ in pad work and valve replacement before they play at student-level pitch.
- Buying a "Bb-and-C" double horn. Beginners need one trumpet, in Bb. C trumpets are for orchestral pros. Pocket trumpets, piccolo trumpets, and rotary trumpets are not first instruments.
- Skipping the lyre. If the student is in a marching band, the trumpet needs a lyre that fits. Confirm before buying.
What we recommend.
For a beginning student starting band: Yamaha YTR-2330, with a Bach 7C mouthpiece, in a Pro Tec PB-301 case. Total under $700. This setup will outlast middle school and follow the student into high school. When ready to step up, the YTR-2330 trades in cleanly, and the mouthpiece (and case) carries forward.
For a committed intermediate student: Bach TR450 or Yamaha YTR-4335, with a Bach 5C or 3C, plus a Pro Tec hardshell. About $1,400. This carries through the audition cycle for All-State, district honor band, and most college music-major auditions.
For a serious advanced student or pro: there is no substitute for a try-out. Visit a brass-specialist shop, play five or six instruments back-to-back, and trust your ear. Bach Stradivarius and Yamaha Xeno are the two most-trodden paths, but the right horn for you is the one you can hear yourself in.
We sell every trumpet listed in this guide.
If you would like a recommendation tailored to your level, your repertoire, or your audition cycle — talk to one of our music librarians. We respond within two working days, no purchase obligation.



