You can get “How Far I’ll Go” sheet music quickly depending on your level and instrument:

Main options

  • Licensed digital sheet music (full, accurate, supports the original creators).
  • Free simplified notes/chords for practice or casual playing.
  • Video tutorials that include on‑screen sheet and a download link.

1. Official digital sheet music (paid)

These are best if you want the “real” arrangement, with correct harmony, rhythm, and lyrics.

  • Musicnotes offers many versions: Piano/Vocal/Guitar, beginner notes, easy piano, audition cuts, choir, string quartet, ukulele, guitar TAB, etc. You buy once, then print or view in their app.
  • MakingMusicFun sells a beginner piano solo version in F major (2 pages, “Moderato”) aimed at students.
  • Playground Sessions sells an intermediate piano arrangement with a downloadable PDF and interactive practice tools (tempo control, hand demos, feedback).

These are ideal if you’re preparing for a performance, audition, or graded exam.

2. Free or easy sheet music resources

If you’re just starting or don’t want to pay yet, look for simplified arrangements and note charts.

  • EasyMusic / EasySheetMusic blogs host free “How Far I’ll Go” material: guitar chords plus basic parts for piano, organ, flute, violin, guitar, often paired with tutorials.
  • NoobNotes provides the melody as simple letter notes (A, B, C#, etc.) with rhythm hints, so you can play the tune on any treble‑clef instrument by following along.
  • Some chord‑chart PDFs for “How Far I’ll Go” (e.g., in G major or F major) give lyrics plus chord symbols (G, Am, F, C, etc.) for quick strumming on guitar or ukulele.

These are great if you mostly want to sing along and accompany yourself with chords, or if you’re teaching kids.

3. Tutorials with sheet music

If you prefer to see and hear it at the same time, piano tutorials can be very helpful.

  • Betacustic has beginner and slow‑easy piano tutorials for “How Far I’ll Go” that show falling notes on screen, with links to matching sheet music (beginner and easy versions, usually via a licensed store link in the description).
  • MakingMusicFun’s kids‑focused lesson on YouTube teaches a very easy version and points you to their easy piano sheet music so learners can practice offline.

These are especially useful if you’re a visual learner and want to check hand position and rhythm while following the printed score.

4. How to choose the right version

Ask yourself:

  1. What’s your instrument?
    • Piano/keyboard: look for “easy piano,” “beginner,” or “intermediate” depending on skill.
    • Guitar/ukulele: look for “Guitar chords,” “Chord chart,” or “TAB.”
    • Voice/choir: choose “Piano/Vocal” or SATB/2‑part arrangements.
  1. What’s your level?
    • Newer players: “Big Note,” “Beginner,” “5‑finger,” or “Very Easy” labels help you avoid frustration.
 * Comfortable readers: standard Piano/Vocal/Guitar or intermediate piano arrangements will sound closer to the movie version.
  1. Free vs paid?
    • Paid scores are more complete and legally clear.
    • Free note charts and chord sheets are fine for practice as long as you’re okay with simplified parts.

5. Simple example path

If you’re a beginner pianist who loves Moana and wants to play soon:

  • Start with an “easy” or “beginner” tutorial video plus matching sheet (e.g., Betacustic beginner or slow easy version, or the MakingMusicFun easy lesson).
  • Once comfortable, upgrade to a full Piano/Vocal score in F major so you get closer to the original arrangement and can play while singing.

If you tell me your instrument and skill level (e.g., “total beginner piano” or “intermediate guitar”), I can narrow it down to 1–2 specific types of “How Far I’ll Go” sheet music that will fit you best.