1967 Fender Telecaster
The 1967 Telecaster — the original solid-body electric guitar. CBS era. Simple, direct, and endlessly versatile.
Current Market Value
* Prices are estimates based on recent market data. Actual value depends on originality, condition, and provenance. Pricing methodology
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Specifications
| Body Wood | Ash (blonde) or Alder (sunburst/colors) |
| Neck Wood | Maple |
| Fingerboard | Brazilian Rosewood or Maple |
| Scale Length | 25.500" |
| Frets | 21 |
| Pickup Config | SS |
| Bridge | Three-saddle bridge with chrome plate |
| Tuners | F-stamped tuners |
| Finish Options | Blonde, Sunburst, Custom colors |
| Est. Production | 8,000 |
Pickups & Electronics
Two single-coil pickups — bridge pickup in chrome plate, neck pickup with metal cover.
What Changed in 1967
CBS era. Keith Richards making the Tele a rock icon.
Collector's Notes
CBS-era Teles are excellent players. Verify original pickups and bridge plate.
How to Authenticate a 1967 Fender Telecaster
The 1967 Telecaster is a CBS-era model. The Telecaster changed less under CBS than the Stratocaster — no headstock size change. The F-stamped standard tuners. The rosewood fingerboard is transitioning from Brazilian to Indian rosewood during this period. Serial numbers on the neck plate with F prefix (six digits). For 1967, 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 (or Kluson on early 1965). Pot codes should show dates corresponding to 1967. Serial number on neck plate with F prefix. Three-saddle bridge. Check rosewood type — Brazilian rosewood was used through approximately 1966-1967, then Indian rosewood became standard. Neck date stamp for verification. The bridge plate and pickup configuration remain largely unchanged from pre-CBS. 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. CBS-era Teles are generally less faked than pre-CBS models, but parts mixing is common. Verify that the neck, body, and electronics date codes are consistent. Watch for replaced bridges (often upgraded to compensated three-saddle or six-saddle). The original three-saddle bridge is an important originality point. Replaced pickups are very common on player-grade Telecasters. CBS-era Telecasters (1967) share similar specifications. The Tele design was more resistant to CBS-era changes than the Strat. The main transitions are: tuners (Kluson to F-stamped around 1965-1966), rosewood (Brazilian to Indian around 1966-1969), and finish (nitro to poly in the late 1960s).