1963 Fender Telecaster

The 1963 Telecaster — the original solid-body electric guitar. Pre-CBS quality. Simple, direct, and endlessly versatile.

Current Market Value

Excellent
$12,600$18,000
Very Good
$7,200$12,600
Good
$3,600$7,200
Fair
$1,800$3,600

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

Thinking About Selling Your 1963 Fender Telecaster?

We buy directly from owners — no auction fees, no waiting. Get a fair offer based on current market data.

Get a Free Quote

Specifications

Body WoodAsh (blonde) or Alder (sunburst/colors)
Neck WoodMaple
FingerboardBrazilian Rosewood or Maple
Scale Length25.500"
Frets21
Pickup ConfigSS
BridgeThree-saddle bridge with chrome plate
TunersKluson Deluxe
Finish OptionsBlonde, Sunburst, Custom colors
Est. Production5,000

Pickups & Electronics

Two single-coil pickups — bridge pickup in chrome plate, neck pickup with metal cover.

What Changed in 1963

Pre-CBS Telecaster. Available in maple or rosewood neck, blonde or sunburst.

Collector's Notes

Pre-CBS Teles are consistently strong. Custom colors are rare and extremely valuable.

How to Authenticate a 1963 Fender Telecaster

The 1963 Telecaster is a pre-CBS model with veneer Brazilian rosewood fingerboard option alongside maple neck. The white pickguard is standard. The spaghetti logo headstock and Kluson tuners are correct. These are highly regarded pre-CBS instruments. Serial numbers on the neck plate, typically five digits beginning with L (the L-series began in 1963). For 1963, L-series numbers should match documented ranges. Neck date stamps (pencil or ink on the heel) and body cavity stamps remain the most reliable dating method. Some guitars also have pencil dates on pickups and potentiometers with source-date codes. Pot codes should correspond to 1963 or the year prior. Kluson Deluxe tuners. Three-saddle bridge with brass barrels. Serial number on neck plate (bridge plate serials phased out). The neck pickup should have its metal cover — verify mounting holes are present. White single-ply pickguard with correct screw pattern. Cloth wiring. Check for body and neck date stamps. The finish should be nitrocellulose lacquer. Nitro finishes check (develop fine cracks) and wear naturally over decades, showing wood underneath at contact points. The aging pattern should be consistent — even checking across the body, not localized. Refinished guitars often have a 'too perfect' look or inconsistent wear. Under UV/blacklight, original nitro fluoresces differently than modern polyester or polyurethane. Original custom color finishes are verified by examining the color in the pickup cavities and under the pickguard where it has been protected from light. Pre-CBS Telecasters in this range are valuable enough to warrant careful authentication. Watch for replaced necks (check pocket fit and date stamps), refinished bodies (examine under pickguard for original color), and replaced pickups. The metal neck pickup cover is often missing — its absence is not necessarily a problem but affects value. Verify Brazilian rosewood if claimed — the dark color and rich figure distinguish it from Indian rosewood. The 1963 Telecaster shares construction details with adjacent pre-CBS years. Key transitions: slab-to-veneer rosewood (mid-1962), L-series serials (1963). The CBS acquisition in 1965 creates the next value boundary.