Pick your type first
- 1Pod machines (Nespresso/Dolce Gusto) — cheapest to buy, zero skill, consistent. Ongoing pod cost is the trade-off. Best for convenience and small kitchens.
- 2Bean-to-cup — fresh-ground coffee at the touch of a button, with milk options. Pricier up front but cheap per cup and great for households who drink a lot.
- 3Manual espresso — the best café-style results and the lowest running cost, but a learning curve and more cleaning. For hobbyists who enjoy the ritual.
- 4Filter/drip — simplest way to make a jug of black coffee for several people; minimal fuss, low cost.
What actually matters within a type
- ✓Running cost, not just sticker price. A cheap pod machine can cost more over a year than a bean-to-cup once you count pods.
- ✓Milk system if you drink lattes/cappuccinos — auto frothers are far more convenient than a manual wand.
- ✓Cleaning & descaling — the thing that quietly decides whether you keep using it. Look for removable, dishwasher-safe parts.
Typical UK price bands (2026)
| Budget | What you get |
|---|---|
| £40–£120 | Pod or basic filter machines — convenient, reliable, cheap to buy. |
| £150–£400 | Good manual espresso or entry bean-to-cup — big jump in quality. |
| £500+ | Full bean-to-cup with auto-milk, or enthusiast espresso setups. |
See today's top coffee machines — with live UK prices
Savvey Search asks the coffee you drink and your budget, then shows three current, in-stock picks with live verified UK prices — from pod machines to bean-to-cup. Deals on De'Longhi, Sage, Nespresso and Breville move constantly, so check what's current and cheapest now.
Get my coffee machine picks →Is it actually a good price?
Coffee machines — especially bean-to-cup — see huge swings between retailers and around sale events, and bundles (with beans or pods) muddy the comparison. Savvey checks 40+ UK retailers for the exact model and shows the cheapest verified price against the market median, so you can see whether a "£100 off" is genuine.
FAQ
Pods or bean-to-cup?
Pods for convenience and low up-front cost; bean-to-cup for better coffee and lower cost per cup if you drink several a day.
Is manual espresso hard?
There's a learning curve and more cleaning, but it gives the best results and cheapest cups. Great if you enjoy the process.
What about running costs?
Always factor pods/beans and descaling. A cheap machine with expensive pods can cost more over a year than a dearer bean-to-cup.