Yamaha Pacifica 112V Review 2026 — Best Electric Under $400, Period
The Pacifica line has quietly been one of the best values in electric guitars since the mid-1990s, and the 112V remains the model most guitar teachers point students toward. It doesn't have the brand recognition of a Stratocaster or Les Paul, but it doesn't need it — the playing experience speaks for itself.
Build Quality & Feel
The Pacifica 112V uses an alder body and bolt-on maple neck — essentially a Fender-style construction approach, which isn't a coincidence given Yamaha's design philosophy for this line. The neck profile is comfortable and slightly slimmer than a typical Fender, making it especially approachable for players with smaller hands or those transitioning from acoustic guitar.
What sets the Pacifica apart at this price is consistency. We've tested multiple units over the years and fret work, neck straightness, and overall setup quality has been remarkably reliable — a real advantage in a price segment where quality control often varies wildly between individual units.
Tone
This is where the Pacifica really earns its reputation. The HSS configuration — one humbucker at the bridge, two single coils at the middle and neck — gives access to tonal territory that single-pickup-type guitars simply can't reach.
- Bridge humbucker: Thick and punchy, capable of convincing rock and even light metal tones
- Middle single coil: Bright and clean, good for funk and pop rhythm
- Neck single coil: Warm and smooth, suitable for blues and jazz-adjacent tones
- Combined positions: The 5-way switch unlocks Strat-style "quack" tones too
This versatility is the entire point of the Pacifica. A beginner who isn't sure yet what genre they'll gravitate toward gets a guitar that can credibly attempt almost anything, rather than committing to one tonal lane the way a pure single-coil or pure humbucker guitar does.
Hardware
The vintage-style tremolo bridge is functional and reasonably stable for the price, though — as with most affordable tremolo systems — aggressive use will require more frequent tuning touch-ups than a fixed bridge guitar like a Telecaster. Standard die-cast tuners hold pitch adequately for the price point.
- Exceptional tonal versatility for the price
- Consistent build quality and factory setup
- Comfortable neck for smaller hands
- HSS pickups handle rock through to clean tones
- Tremolo bridge needs occasional tuning attention
- No case included
- Doesn't excel at any one tone the way a specialized guitar does
Who Should Buy This
This is the electric guitar we'd recommend to almost any beginner or intermediate player who isn't 100% sure what genre they want to specialize in yet. It's also a smart backup or practice guitar for more experienced players who want reliability without spending serious money.
Frequently Asked Questions
The bridge humbucker can handle lighter metal and hard rock convincingly, especially with a distortion or overdrive pedal, but dedicated metal players will eventually want a guitar with higher-output pickups, like an Ibanez RG.
Availability varies by retailer and region — check current stock with your retailer of choice, as left-handed Pacifica models are produced in smaller numbers.