Call 866‑388‑4445 or chat to save on orders of $199+
Guitar Center logo

Martin Soprano Ukuleles

$209/mo.‡ with 24-month financing*
Learn More
See all Martin products
For more than 175 years and counting, C.F. Martin & Co. has been employing the world's finest artisans and luthiers to craft stunning, high-quality acoustic stringed instruments. In 1916, Martin entered the ukulele market, and ever since, their models have been considered by countless professional ukulelists to be the best. From exceptional volume to their full-bodied sound, Martin soprano ukuleles are everything you'd expect from such a prestigious and legendary stringed instrument company.

Martin soprano ukuleles come in a variety of styles and the right one for you will depend on your personal tastes and how much you're willing to spend. One of their most popular sellers under $300 is the OXKUKE Soprano Ukulele. Designed with Sitka spruce bracing and fashioned from high pressure wood laminate (HPL), this uke comes with a handy gig bag and is loaded with killer features. From its mahogany end-blocks to its cedar ribbons and morado fingerboard and bridge, the OXKUKE is perfect for festival stages and moonlit beach parties alike.

Speaking of festival stages, it's easy to tell that Martin soprano ukuleles are made with experienced performers in mind, and the S1 has the looks, feel and tone to impress any discerning player. Constructed from solid genuine mahogany and attached with a dovetail mahogany neck, this uke boasts an inland rosette, traditional cedar linings and a rosewood bridge and fingerboard. Like the model mentioned earlier, the S1 also comes with a padded gig bag to ensure this beautifully-crafted instrument is well maintained anywhere you take it.

Whichever Martin soprano ukulele you choose, you can be more than certain that it will provide you with a lifetime of musical enjoyment if it's properly cared for. After all, we're talking about a stringed instrument from Martin here: a company that has been specializing in ukuleles as early as the first Portuguese sailor was spotted strumming one passionately on a glistening Hawaiian coast.