19 Best Prime Day Espresso Machine Deals (2023)

We’ve poured over all the sales to bring you the crème de la crème of coffee deals.
A clay illustration of an espresso machine with coffee cups.
ILLUSTRATION: DANIEL JURMAN

Amazon Prime Day October 2023

As the prophecy foretold, even death could not stop Prime Day. Like Dracula (the Claes Bang version), these Prime Day espresso machine deals are killer, but unspeakably alluring—especially if you're in the market for a new coffee machine, or just want to up your home barista game with some coffee accessories. After all, who doesn't love a freshly pulled shot of human blood espresso? 

We test products year-round and handpicked these deals. Products that are sold out or no longer discounted as of publishing will be crossed out. We'll update this guide periodically throughout the sale event.

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WIRED Featured Deals

Espresso Machine Deals

Take a sip of our Best Espresso Machines, Best Coffee Grinders, Best Portable Coffee Makers, and Best Portable Espresso Makers guides for more.

Breville Barista Express 

Photograph: Breville

Breville's Barista Express is one of our favorite all-in-one espresso machines. It includes a burr grinder, which lets you grind your coffee directly into the portafilter, fresh for each and every shot so you get the best possible flavor out of our beans. It's literally all you need to get started with making café-worthy espresso at home.

Breville Barista Express Impress

Photograph: Breville

Take everything we said about the Barista Express, and add onto it an automated tamping mechanism. That's the Barista Express Impress. That's not a dig, it's genuinely a great feature and it helps you take care of one of the other variables that can make or break a good shot of espresso: how much pressure goes into tamping the grounds. It's easy even for a seasoned barista to press too hard or not hard enough, resulting in a less-than-perfect shot.

Breville Barista Pro

Photograph: Breville

This machine is a bit of an upgrade over Breville's other all-in-one machines. It includes a digital display with programmable shot options and a new heating system that's much faster. That means you can reliably steam milk and pull espresso shots without too much downtime in between, while you wait for the boiler to heat the water back up. 

De'Longhi's La Specialista Maestro basically makes your entire cup of coffee for you. It's a high-end espresso machine with a built-in grinder, but its special milk-frothing system will steam and froth your milk at the touch of a button–you don't even have to hold the pitcher. It features easy-to-use buttons and knobs right on the front panel, and the integrated grinder means you can grind directly into your portafilter for super-quick, super-fresh espresso whenever you want it. 

Breville Barista Touch

Photograph: Amazon

This machine is somewhere in between a fully-automated espresso machine and a semiautomated espresso machine, like the Barista Express and Barista Pro. It includes a big touch screen, where you can just choose the kind of drink you want to make. It walks you through everything you need to do and even steams the milk for you (all you have to do is hold the pitcher).

Photograph: Breville

Just like the Barista Express and the Barista Express Impress, the Barista Touch Impress is the slightly snazzier version of the Barista Touch. It includes an automatic tamping mechanism for getting just the right pressure every single time and a quicker heating mechanism so you're never more than a few seconds away from a shot of espresso. 

Photograph: Amazon

If the Specialista Maestro is still a little too manual operation for you, the Dinamica Plus is probably the way to go. This little thing is a fully automatic espresso machine. It will grind, tamp and brew your coffee, and it'll even froth the milk, all on its own. You just push a button and this little countertop robot makes you your favorite coffee drink. It has one other feature I like: The milk tank is right there on the front so it's easy to take off and clean after each and every use (which you should absolutely do!). 

The Specialista Arte espresso machine is a bit like the Maestro, but it doesn't feature the auto-rinsing feature or the self-steaming milk feature. But by taking out those features, you save quite a bit of money if those are both things you'd rather handle on your own. This one includes an integrated burr grinder just like the Maestro, so you can grind directly into your portafilter. 

Not all of us can spend hundreds of dollars on an espresso machine. Normally, the cheap ones aren't that great but the Stilosa is one of our favorites. You get a solid portafilter, a reliable steam pump, and a steaming wand to make a solid cup of espresso. It also held up well.

Coffee Gear Deals

Be sure to read our Best Coffee Subscriptions guide to get access to freshly roasted beans. 

Fellow Atmos

Photograph: Fellow

We're big fans of these vacuum containers. By sucking all the air out of the container, they're great for keeping your coffee beans fresh. They're also good at keeping special herbs extra fresh for longer. 

Sometimes it's nice to use a pour-over with something other than a coffee mug. This double-walled carafe from Fellow is sleek and stylish, and it'll keep your coffee way warmer, for way longer, than you might expect. It's an excellent accompaniment to any mug-top pour-over setup, and a great way to treat yourself on a chilly autumn morning. 

These are reviewer Louryn Strampe's favorite coffee mugs, and not just because they're a brilliant shade of pink. The cups' construction makes it appear like your drink is floating, and the 16-ounce capacity means more coffee down your gullet.

Fellow Stagg EKG

Photograph: Fellow

The Stagg EKG kettle is the perfect option for those who love making pour-over coffee—particularly because the gooseneck gives you precise control when pouring water over the coffee grounds. It also comes equipped with a temperature control knob and LCD display that allows you to heat up the water at any temperature you'd like. This is the lowest price we've tracked.

If you have kids who touch everything dangerous in your kitchen, we recommend the double-walled Zwilling kettle in our Best Kettles guide. It comes with six presets, as well as a dedicated button for making baby formula.

Investing in nice glassware is an underrated way to make your home coffee setup just a bit more relaxing and meditative. Pull that shot of espresso, pour it into this cup, top it off with some steamed milk, and treat yourself to a morning latte curled up on your couch. You deserve it. 

Photograph: KitchenAid

This super easy-to-clean grinder is on our Best Coffee Grinders list as an alternative and for good reason. The burrs are easily accessible, which is important for cleaning up any coffee buildup.

Photograph: Aeropress

We go nuts for coffee here on WIRED's Gear Team, and although we love gadgets, it isn't the ingenuity of the Aeropress that wins our hearts. It's the simple fact that it makes a damn fine cup of brew. It also happens to be incredibly easy to use and clean up. This one will make 10 fluid ounces of coffee up to a time, which is about a diner mug's worth.

We haven't been able to try 1Zpresso's hand grinder yet, but it gets high marks from espresso gurus around the web. It's over triple the price of our favorite hand grinder, the Hario Skerton Pro ($50), so there are certainly cheaper ways to grind, but the J-Max has always garnered high marks for its ability to deliver a very even fine grind. 

Cafflano's Klassic is the best all-in-one portable coffee maker. With this one little device, you grind beans, brew, and then drink your coffee. The only thing you need to do is boil water.


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