Anyone looking for an all-solid acoustic guitar quickly reaches four-figure prices in the premium segment. MERIDA, a Taiwanese manufacturer, takes its own path here: all-solid tops, backs and sides, careful workmanship and real bone hardware, at a price noticeably below the big boutique names. This profile shows what defines a MERIDA guitar and which model suits which playing style.
The common thread through the range is all-solid construction. Unlike laminated woods, solid wood matures over the years and gains in tone. It is precisely this maturing process that explains why experienced players prefer all-solid instruments.
01What all-solid really means
All-solid means the top, back and sides are made of continuous solid wood, not laminated layers. The effect is audible. Solid woods vibrate more freely, deliver more sustain and develop over the years into a more mature, open tone. MERIDA applies this construction consistently across several model ranges and combines it with a nut and saddle made of real bone, which transmits string vibration to the top more effectively.
Typical of the brand are ergonomic details usually found on much more expensive instruments: an integrated armrest on the upper bout on many models, a climate-stable Omega fingerboard and a clean factory setup of the action.
02The model ranges and their body shapes
MERIDA covers the common body shapes, and the shape determines the character. The Procnias is an Orchestra Model with cutaway and short scale, with an all-solid spruce top and African Redwood back and sides, warm and rich in sustain, comfortable to play thanks to the lower string tension. The Castellan in Grand Auditorium format combines solid spruce with solid mahogany and ships with a case, a balanced all-rounder. Those after the big sound find it in the Poison in Grand Jumbo format with all-solid Santos rosewood, with a deep bass foundation and enormous presence.
Alongside the all-solid models there are instruments with a distinctive character, such as the Diana with a solid cedar top and spalted maple, or the Black Hole, also with a cedar top, both warm and fingerstyle-friendly.



| Model | Body shape | Top | Back and sides | Ideal for |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Procnias | Orchestra Model, cutaway | Solid spruce | African Redwood solid | Fingerstyle, smaller hands |
| Castellan | Grand Auditorium | Solid spruce | Mahogany solid | All-rounder, stage and studio |
| Poison | Grand Jumbo, cutaway | Solid spruce | Santos rosewood solid | Strumming, big sound |
03Tonewoods and tonal character
The choice of wood decides the sound. A spruce top delivers a clear, dynamic response with good projection, a cedar top sounds warmer from the start and responds particularly finely to quiet fingerpicking. For back and sides, mahogany provides a balanced, midrange-focused tone, while rosewood and the related African Redwood add deeper bass and brilliant highs.
This variety is the reason a closer look pays off: a MERIDA guitar with a cedar top plays differently from one with a spruce top, and both have their place, depending on whether you strum or fingerpick.
04Electro-acoustic: stage-ready from the factory
Many MERIDA acoustic guitars come fitted with electronics and are therefore stage-ready without modification. They feature proven pickup systems from Fishman and LR Baggs, often with an integrated tuner and anti-feedback circuit. Anyone who also wants to play amplified, in the rehearsal room, on a small stage or in the studio, gets the natural acoustic sound transmitted faithfully.
The Castellan, for instance, comes with an LR Baggs system and a case, while the Procnias and Diana rely on the Fishman ISY-201 system with tuner. A look at the respective product description reveals which system is installed.
MERIDA occupies a clear niche: all-solid acoustic guitars with honest workmanship and thoughtful ergonomics, without the boutique markup. The right model depends on body shape, top wood and playing style. If in doubt, the best approach is to compare two or three models from different body shapes.
Frequently asked questions
Are MERIDA acoustic guitars really all-solid?
Who is a MERIDA guitar for?
What is the difference between a spruce and a cedar top?
Can I play a MERIDA guitar amplified?
Discover all-solid acoustic guitars
Browse the six-string acoustic guitars in our catalogue and find the model that suits your playing style.
View all acoustic guitarsCastellan Grand AuditoriumPassende Produkte
MERIDA acoustic guitar Procnias, solid spruce, Redwood OM Cutaway
MERIDA acoustic guitar POISON - solid spruce, Santos rosewood - Grand Jumbo Cutaway with bag