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Buying guide

Best Espresso Machines Under £600

By Ninth Bar · Independent UK espresso machine review site

2 machines in this guide

Guide overview

Best Espresso Machine Setups Under £600 for UK Home Baristas (2026)

For UK home baristas in 2026, the sweet spot for genuine café-quality espresso without professional-level spend sits under £600. In this bracket you’ll find compact beginner-friendly machines and capable all-in-ones that can produce café-standard shots and milk drinks every morning. We’ve tested both hands-on to give you an honest picture.

What to Look For

Total Setup Cost, Not Just Machine Price

A machine priced at £400 still needs a grinder — and a decent burr grinder starts at around £100. Always budget for the full setup. If you already own a good grinder, you can get better results for less by choosing a machine-only option like the Bambino Plus.

Heat-Up Time

Heat-up time matters more than most buyers realise. Older boiler designs can take 25–30 minutes to be truly ready. Modern thermocoil designs heat up in seconds — look for machines that are ready in under a minute for practical daily use.

Steam Wand Type

Automatic steam wands texture milk for you — great for consistent flat whites without a learning curve. Manual steam wands give more control and are better for developing latte art technique, but take practice. Choose based on your goals and patience.

Built-In Grinder vs. Separate

All-in-one machines with built-in grinders are convenient and space-efficient. But a standalone grinder paired with a simpler machine usually produces better extraction, especially as your skills improve. If you’re starting from scratch, an all-in-one is hard to beat for value. If you already grind well, skip the built-in.

Our Top Pick: Sage Bambino Plus (~£400)

The Bambino Plus is our top recommendation for UK buyers who want genuine third-wave espresso quality without a steep learning curve. Its 3-second heat-up time is class-leading, and the automatic steam wand produces consistently textured milk from day one. It doesn’t include a grinder, so budget £100–£150 for a decent burr grinder alongside it — but the results from that combination are hard to beat under £600 total.

  • Best for: Buyers who already own a grinder, or who want to pair with a quality separate grinder
  • Price: ~£400 (machine only)
  • Heat-up: 3 seconds

Best All-in-One: Sage Barista Express Impress (£729)

The Barista Express Impress sits slightly above the £600 headline but is the most capable all-in-one machine near this budget. It integrates a 25-step conical burr grinder with the unique Impress tamping system — a spring-loaded mechanism that applies a consistent 10kg tamp automatically, removing the most common source of beginner errors. If you want one machine that handles grinding, tamping, and pulling shots, this is the one to buy.

  • Best for: Complete beginners who want one box, one counter footprint, and minimal faff
  • Price: £729 (grinder included)
  • Heat-up: ~30 seconds

Which Should You Buy?

If you already own a decent grinder, or your kitchen is small, go with the Bambino Plus. Add a good grinder and your total spend stays under £600 while delivering excellent shot quality.

If you’re starting completely from scratch and want everything in one box — no separate grinder to choose, position, or calibrate — the Barista Express Impress is worth the extra spend. The Impress tamping system alone will save beginners weeks of dialling-in frustration.

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