When school starts, a first recorder is often on the list, and two questions come up quickly when buying one: German or baroque fingering, and plastic or wood. Both choices affect how easy the start is and how long the instrument stays useful.
This buying guide explains the differences calmly, one at a time, and ends with a clear recommendation for children in their first year. One thing up front: there is no wrong choice, only one that fits the school lessons and your child plans better.

The easy start
Ideal for: Beginners whose school requires German fingering, or short-term playing
See all Blockflöten →
The international standard
Ideal for: Children who want to keep playing, with cleaner intonation in the upper range
See all Blockflöten →01German or baroque fingering: what is the difference
The fingering decides which holes you close for each note. With German fingering, the notes C and F can be played with a simple, closed grip. That makes the first songs easier for beginners, because fewer fork fingerings are needed. German fingering is common in many German primary schools.
Baroque fingering, also called English fingering, is the international standard. The grips for C and F are a little more demanding, but intonation is cleaner, especially in the upper range, and the chromatic layout is more logical. If your child later wants to learn the alto, tenor or bass recorder, or play in an ensemble, baroque fingering is the future-proof choice.
The practical rule: if the school specifies a fingering, follow it so your child learns the same grips as the class. With no requirement and longer-term playing in mind, baroque is the better investment.


02Plastic or wood: what suits the start of school
A plastic recorder is inexpensive, robust and forgiving. It handles moisture with no break-in time, can be rinsed and survives daily school life in a backpack without trouble. That is exactly what makes it the ideal first recorder for children: ready to play right away, and no drama if it gets dropped.
A wooden recorder, for example in pearwood or maple, sounds warmer and softer. In return it needs more care: it has to be broken in slowly, dried well and oiled occasionally, otherwise the wood can crack. Wood pays off when the child is clearly sticking with it and the next step is due.
For the start of school, plastic is the right choice in the vast majority of cases. If you value tone from the outset and are happy with the care, wooden school recorders are a good middle ground.


| Feature | Plastic | Wood |
|---|---|---|
| Sound | clear, a bit more direct | warmer, softer |
| Care | rinsable, no break-in | break in, dry, oil |
| Robustness | very robust, school-proof | more sensitive to moisture and knocks |
| Price | inexpensive (entry level) | higher (from about 70 euros) |
| Ideal for | start of school, beginners | advanced players, long-term playing |
03Our recommendation for the first year
For a child in their first school year, we recommend a plastic soprano recorder in the fingering the school requires. It is inexpensive, ready to play and survives daily use. If there is no school requirement and your child should keep playing for a long time, choose baroque fingering so there is no need to relearn later.
In concrete terms: a model like the Yamaha YRS-23 Sopranblockflöte Deutsche Griffweise weiss in German fingering or the Yamaha YRS-32B Blockflöte Sopran barocke Griffweise braun in baroque fingering covers the start of school reliably. If you want to go straight to wood, the Mollenhauer Sopranblockflöte Student Birnbaum - Deutsche Griffweise is an easy-care school recorder. Also mind the right size: for beginners the soprano recorder is the usual format, and small hands manage it well. You will find the full range in the Blockflöten.
In short: for fingering, follow the school requirement, otherwise choose baroque for the future. For material, plastic is the easy companion for the start of school, wood the next step for advanced players.
Frequently asked questions
German or baroque fingering for the start of school?
Plastic or wood for beginners?
What size does a beginner need?
What does a recorder for the start of school cost?
Find the right recorder for the start of school
Browse soprano recorders in plastic and wood, in German and baroque fingering.
See all recordersPlastic soprano (baroque)Passende Produkte
Yamaha YRS-23 soprano recorder German fingering white
Yamaha YRS-32B recorder soprano baroque fingering brown
Mollenhauer Soprano Recorder Student Pear - German Fingering
Moeck Flauto Rondo pear soprano recorder 2202 - Baroque fingering