Guide

How to Practice Piano With Your Own Sheet Music

6 min read

Most piano apps give you a library of songs to choose from. That's fine if you're a beginner looking for pop songs. But if you're working on a piece from your teacher, preparing for an exam, or learning a score you found online, you're stuck. The app can't help you with music it doesn't have.

The solution is simple: use an app that lets you bring your own sheet music. Upload the score, and practice it with tools that help you learn faster.

Why Practice With Your Own Music?

There's a reason your teacher assigns specific pieces. Each one targets different skills: a Chopin nocturne builds phrasing, a Bach invention trains independence between hands, a Czerny etude develops technique. A preset library can't replace that.

When you practice your own music, you:

What You Need

To practice with your own sheet music digitally, you need two things: a score file and an app that can read it.

Score formats that work

What to look for in an app

A Practice Routine That Works

Once you've uploaded your score, here's a method that actually builds skill:

1. Listen through once

Play the entire piece at full speed without touching the keyboard. Follow the notation on screen. This gives you an overview of the structure, dynamics, and any tricky passages coming up.

2. Identify the hard parts

Every piece has 2-3 sections that are harder than the rest. These are where you'll spend 80% of your practice time. Mark them mentally or loop them right away.

3. Slow it way down

Start at 50-60% speed. This isn't about playing through — it's about programming your muscle memory correctly. Playing slowly with correct notes is infinitely more valuable than playing fast with mistakes.

4. Hands separate, then together

For difficult passages, practice each hand alone first. Once both hands are comfortable at slow speed, combine them. This is standard practice technique, but it's so much easier when the app can mute one hand for you.

5. Loop and repeat

Set a loop around a 4-8 bar section. Play it 10 times at a slow tempo. Then bump the speed up 5-10%. Repeat. This incremental approach builds speed without building bad habits.

6. Play through at tempo

Once the hard sections are solid, play the full piece at the target tempo. Note any remaining rough spots and loop those in your next session.

Practice your own scores with Piano Nova

Upload a PDF, MusicXML, or photo. Slow it down, loop sections, practice hands separately.

Get Early Access

Common Mistakes to Avoid

The Bottom Line

The best piano practice happens with music that matters to you. Not a preset library. Not someone else's playlist. Your teacher's assignments, your exam pieces, the score you found that you can't stop thinking about.

Upload it. Slow it down. Loop the hard parts. That's how you get better.