Espresso coffee machines
Find the best espresso machine for your home with our buying guide and test results for 68 current and 55 discontinued models.
We’ve tested range of espresso coffee machines and found out how good a brew they make and how easy they are to use.
Lifetime score
Our overall score combines test performance (how well the appliance works) with predicted reliability (how likely models from the brand are to remain free of faults) and brand satisfaction (how likely owners of the brand are to be very satisfied).
We’ll only recommend appliances you’ll love to own, that work well and will keep working well for a long time.
Test performance
It’s no good if a product lasts for several decades if it doesn’t work well in the first place. A disappointing product will soon become unloved and unwanted. For this reason, our independent lab testing forms an important part of our overall lifetime score.
Our espresso machines test includes:
- Coffee making performance: We test how well a machine makes coffee, including taste, milk frothing and temperature consistency. For the taste test, we consider crema colour and thickness, coffee aroma, flavour, mouth-feel and aftertaste.
- Ease of use: We assess how easy an espresso machine is to use, evaluating its controls and displays, programming, adjustments to settings, water container convenience, use of grinder, operation and evenness of cup filling, vibration, removing spent coffee, and exterior cleaning.
Predicted reliability
It’s reasonable to expect a new appliance to remain fault-free for at least the first five years. Our predicted reliability won’t tell you whether your espresso machine will stop working tomorrow, but it does show which brands make models that are less likely to fail.
Brand satisfaction
Satisfaction is important – no appliance should be a source of buyer regret. Appliances with very satisfied owners are more likely to get cleaned regularly and maintained well. Their owners are more likely to seek repair for faults than look for a quick replacement.
Repairability (coming soon)
Older appliances are more likely to go wrong, but common faults should be repairable. Repairs should be affordable and convenient – parts need to be easy to find at a reasonable cost, instructions should be available, and repair shouldn’t need hours of expert labour.
We haven’t been able to assess repairability yet, but it’s important, so we’re gathering data and forming a plan so we can start including it in our lifetime scores. It will be challenging. We’ll need to analyse product failure data in our reliability surveys, conduct hands-on inspections to evaluate how easy products are to take apart, and investigate which brands make spare parts available at a reasonable price.
Survey data
In our annual reliability and satisfaction survey, consumers tell us about faults that have made an appliance they own unusable or mean they’ve had to change how they use it. We also ask them how satisfied they are with the appliance. We use this data to produce our predicted reliability and brand satisfaction scores.
We use a statistical test to rate the relative performance of each brand. Compared to data we have for all products (of the same type) in the survey, we rate each brand with highest, high, average, low or lowest for predicted reliability and brand satisfaction respectively.
You can compare the rating of different brands for the same product type (for example, the predicted reliability rating for Breville and Sunbeam espresso machines), but you can’t compare the results for different product types (for example, satisfaction ratings for Nescafe espresso machines and Breville kettles).
We analyse brands that get at least 30 responses in our survey. That means there are some brands we can’t analyse because we don’t have enough data. For those brands, we assume they have average reliability and satisfaction.
Our data is based on 1,653 responses from owners of espresso machines in our 2023 survey.
We've tested 123 espresso coffee machines.
Find the right one for you.