Infuser

Home, Kitchen & Appliances › Coffee Machines

Infuser

Coffee Machines

Breville logoby Brevillebrand #1 in Coffee Machines
Street price$41–$518as of Jul 6?
Price tier

Budget · bottom third of coffee machines

Should you buy it??

ReconsiderCheckTrust it

Trust it

based on 2 of 6 signals

Quick take

In short: what each side says

Reviewers · Buyers — each opened up in full further down ↓

Reviewers4.25 video reviews

Reviewers describe the Infuser as a sturdy, well-built entry into semi-automatic espresso with genuine steam power and a pressure gauge, held back by a slow single boiler and a manual steam wand that takes practice.

Buyers4.5603 ratings

Owners praise the Infuser's espresso quality, durability, and intuitive operation, but milk frothing technique and excessive water waste from auto-purging divide satisfaction.

Every side lands high — Trust it.

Behind this verdict5 reviews · 603 owners~3 hrs of research 2 min to read

Main competitors

Top rivals in Coffee Machines.

#4
Oracle Jet
Oracle Jet.

Sage logoby Sage

Super-automatic espresso machine

Best rank in this scope, recent weeks Feb 1 · #92 · Jul 1 · #9 · Aug 1 · #43 · Sep 1 · #11 · Oct 1 · #46-wk trend?
#5
Z10
Z10

Jura logoby Jura

Automatic bean-to-cup coffee machine

Best rank in this scope, recent weeks Feb 1 · #8 · Mar 1 · #9 · Apr 1 · #20 · May 1 · #18 · Jun 1 · #16 · Jul 1 · #5 · Aug 1 · #4 · Sep 1 · #6 · Oct 1 · #56-wk trend?
#6
La Specialista Opera
La Specialista Opera

De'Longhi logoby De'Longhi

Bean-to-cup automatic espresso machine

Best rank in this scope, recent weeks Aug 1 · #25 · Oct 1 · #66-wk trend?
01

The verdict

What the panel makes of it.

The Breville Infuser is a semi-automatic espresso machine made by Breville. It was designed in Australia. The machine brews espresso through a pressure-actuated group head. Home baristas buy it to pull consistent shots without a grinder. AI assistants rank it number twenty-seven for best home espresso machines.

Act one

What the machines think.

Several AI models read the category and place this product — model by model, list by list, over time.

02

Rank trajectory?

Weeks of movement.

Act two · ★ new

What the people say.

The same product, judged by the owners who bought and filmed it — what they praise, what they knock, who it's for.

03

Video reviews?

What reviewers actually say.

4.2 / 5positive · 5 videosTrust it
Spread0.7 · tight
135

AI summary of 5 reviews · as of Jul 2026

Reviewers describe the Infuser as a sturdy, well-built entry into semi-automatic espresso with genuine steam power and a pressure gauge, held back by a slow single boiler and a manual steam wand that takes practice.

Where reviewers disagree: One reviewer sees the slower steam heat-up as a downside, another frames it as an advantage for beginners learning technique; Reviewers differ on how much practice the pressurized baskets truly save versus the payoff of switching to non-pressurized baskets

Mixed reviews

What they praise

  • Solid stainless steel build with a large water tank
  • Comes with both pressurized and non-pressurized baskets, useful for beginners moving toward more control
  • Pressure gauge helps dial in shots
  • PID-based temperature stability unusual at this level
  • Thoughtful details like a magnetic tamper, hidden accessory storage, and drip-tray-full indicator

What they knock

  • Single boiler means waiting for the machine to switch to steam mode
  • Manual steam wand requires technique and practice to get good microfoam
  • Steam production is on-the-fly rather than stored, making steaming slower than some rivals

Who reviewers think this product is — and isn’t — for

For you if

Home users starting out in espresso who want room to grow into manual control without buying a built-in grinder.

Look elsewhere if

Buyers who want fast, hands-off steaming or commercial-speed workflow should look at higher-end dual boiler machines.

Synthesised from: Seattle Coffee Gear · Coffee Geek TV · Antonio Berti · Whole Latte Love · Bara AlMakadma

Watch the reviews

Breville Infuser | Crew Review

Seattle Coffee Gear

Breville Infuser Espresso Machine Review (4K) Is It The Best Home/Office Machine?

Coffee Geek TV

Making coffee with the Breville Infuser cappuccino machine

Antonio Berti

Breville The Infuser: What's Brewing #28

Whole Latte Love

Breville Infuser 4 Years Later, and Counting... Let's Make a Latte

Bara AlMakadma

04

What buyers say?

What Google knows about it.

Buyer reviews · Google Shopping?

Beyond the video critics, Google pools 603 buyer ratings of the Infuser from across retailers — a far wider, if blunter, jury. Here’s the shape of that opinion.

4.5 / 5

603 ratings · 7 written
across 2 retailers

Buyers trust it
571%
419%
34%
23%
13%

What owners single out

Espresso quality4.5
Milk frothing & steaming3.5
Ease of use & learning curve4.0
Build quality & durability4.5
Heat-up speed & efficiency4.0
Water waste & maintenance2.5

Buyers' weakest aspect—milk frothing—aligns with video reviewers' note that the manual steam wand requires technique and practice to achieve good microfoam.

In their words

I purchased the Breville Infuser coffee machine. We purchased this because it came highly recommended by many friends. I have to say this lives up to the hype. We like to experiment with different coffee beans from all different brands and this produces great coffee everytime. It has easy to use functions and is very intuitive. I now also recommend the Breville the Infuser.

Paul T · verified purchase · breville.com

The espresso quality you can get and the build quality (apart from the steam valve which just bad) is really good. But using the machine is a bit painful. The thing purges itself all the time (after brewing and steaming) so it uses a lot more water than you'd expect. The "purged" water goes in the drip tray (not via the hot water outlet or steam wand so you can't catch it) which means you'll have

Benop · verified purchase · myer.com.au

as of July 6 · 603 buyer ratings?

06

Frequently asked

What buyers want to know.

  • What's the main catch with the Breville Infuser?

    It has a single boiler, which means you wait for the machine to switch modes between espresso and steam. Reviewers note the steam wand is manual and requires practice to produce good microfoam, and steam generation happens on-the-fly rather than from stored heat, making steaming slower than dual boiler machines.

  • Who should buy the Breville Infuser?

    It's designed for home users starting out in espresso who want room to grow into manual control. It comes with both pressurized and non-pressurized baskets to support beginners moving toward more hands-on technique.

  • Who should skip it?

    Buyers who need fast, hands-off steaming or want commercial-speed workflow should look at higher-end dual boiler machines instead.

  • What makes the Breville Infuser solid for beginners?

    Reviewers highlight the solid stainless steel build, large water tank, pressure gauge to help dial in shots, and PID-based temperature stability—which is unusual at this price level. It also includes thoughtful details like a magnetic tamper, hidden accessory storage, and a drip-tray-full indicator.

  • Is the slower steam heat-up a problem?

    Reviewers disagree on this. One sees it as a downside, while another frames it as an advantage for beginners learning proper steaming technique, since it forces them to develop better hands-on skills.

  • Should I use the pressurized or non-pressurized baskets?

    Reviewers differ on how much the pressurized baskets truly help beginners versus the payoff of switching to non-pressurized baskets for more control. The machine comes with both, letting you move at your own pace.

07

The recap

Where it stands today.

  • MakerBy Breville — see how it ranks across other intents on its brand profile.