1969 Fender Jazzmaster

The 1969 Jazzmaster — CBS-era offset with floating tremolo and unique pickup voicing. The guitar of surf, indie, and alternative rock.

Current Market Value

Excellent
$4,200$6,000
Very Good
$2,400$4,200
Good
$1,200$2,400
Fair
$600$1,200

* Prices are estimates based on recent market data. Actual value depends on originality, condition, and provenance. Pricing methodology

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Specifications

Body WoodAlder (offset contour body)
Neck WoodMaple
FingerboardBrazilian Rosewood (veneer)
Scale Length25.500"
Frets22
Pickup ConfigSS
BridgeFloating tremolo with separate bridge
TunersF-stamped tuners
Finish OptionsSunburst, Custom colors
Est. Production4,000

Pickups & Electronics

Two Jazzmaster single-coil pickups (wider, shallower than Strat). Rhythm/lead circuit switching.

What Changed in 1969

CBS era. Jazzmaster losing ground to Strat and Tele.

Collector's Notes

CBS-era Jazzmasters are undervalued and excellent. The alt-rock resurgence has driven prices up.

How to Authenticate a 1969 Fender Jazzmaster

The 1969 Jazzmaster is a CBS-era model. F-stamped tuners. Brazilian rosewood fingerboard. Production was declining as the Jazzmaster lost market share to the Stratocaster and Telecaster. Despite lower market position, these are excellent instruments that would later be rediscovered by alternative rock musicians. Serial numbers on the neck plate with F prefix (six digits). For 1969, numbers should match documented CBS-era ranges. Neck date stamps (now often ink-stamped rather than penciled) on the heel remain important. Potentiometer date codes (typically CTS or Stackpole pots with EIA source codes and date stamps like '304-6' + last two digits of year + week number) help verify the production date. F-stamped tuners. Floating tremolo assembly — verify completeness. Rhythm/lead circuit. Two Jazzmaster pickups. Pot codes corresponding to 1969. Serial on neck plate. Brazilian rosewood fingerboard. Polyester finish likely. The finish may be nitrocellulose lacquer or thick polyester (poly became standard through the 1970s). Polyester finishes are noticeably thicker, harder, and do not check or wear like nitro. Poly-finished guitars tend to be slightly heavier. A thick, glossy, chip-resistant finish with no checking is consistent with CBS-era polyester. If the finish shows nitro-style checking on a claimed 1969 instrument, verify carefully — it may be a refinish or misidentified earlier guitar. CBS-era Jazzmasters were often unloved and heavily modified. Many have had pickups, bridges, tuners, and wiring replaced. The floating tremolo parts are frequently missing. At lower price points, modifications may be acceptable for players, but verify if the guitar is sold as 'all original.' The alt-rock resurgence has increased demand and prices for these instruments. CBS-era Jazzmasters (1969) share similar specifications. Production declined through the 1970s. Brazilian rosewood fingerboard distinguishes pre-1970 from later models. The Jazzmaster was discontinued in 1980 before being revived.