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Home Retail News Comment

The home barista effect: how premiumisation is affecting UK coffee machine retail

by Fiona Briggs
June 2, 2026
in Comment
Reading Time: 4 mins read

In recent years, coffee shops have raised their prices. Consumers have followed suit. This has led to a rise in sales of domestic coffee machines, and higher expectations regarding machines for home use. For UK retailers, the coffee machine market is undergoing a major change.

At-home coffee is growing, and the category is moving upmarket

The UK alone drinks around 98 million cups of coffee every day. Pod machine ownership has reached around 12.6 million UK households, and more and more people want their own home coffee machine. The direction is clear: more consumers are choosing to invest in equipment, and what they are prepared to spend has risen markedly.

Nevertheless, roughly 80% of UK households still buy instant coffee for everyday use. That proportion holds steady among older consumers. Instead, growth is being driven by the customer segment that has already switched to the premium format.

Among 16 to 34-year-olds, ground coffee and capsule formats are rapidly displacing instant as the preferred choice at home. They want café-quality results, and they are prepared to spend on the equipment to achieve that. The resulting machine sales are increasingly concentrated in the mid- to premium-end market.

Rising café prices are accelerating the home investment case

UK coffee shop prices have risen by around 80p since 2022, pushing the average above £4. Premium venues in big cities such as London are already at £5, and the pressures driving those costs upward show no sign of easing.

A household with two daily coffee drinkers, each buying one café coffee per day, spends roughly £3,000 a year at current prices. A decent bean-to-cup machine at £400 to £600 pays for itself within a few months. That calculation is being made more consciously now, not just intuitively.

Price alone is however not enough as an explanation. An increasing number of people have developed a more educated palate. They can tell the difference between a flat white and a latte, between a light-roasted single origin and a dark commercial blend. That raises the floor for acceptable home machines.

Professional-grade features are now available under £1,500

Temperature control used to be the preserve of commercial espresso machines costing several thousand pounds. It is now widely available on home machines. The same applies to pressure pre-infusion and dual boilers, hardware that once separated the professional setup from anything a household could realistically own.

This has resulted in what the industry refers to as the prosumer segment: machines that perform at a level close to that of professional models but being designed and priced for home use. The line between serious enthusiast and commercial equipment has become blurred. Entry-level machines are now judged against a standard that mid-range equipment would not have met five years ago.

Smart connectivity is another important aspect. Manufacturers are integrating Wi-Fi, app control and remote scheduling into machines at mid-range price points. This allows users to programme brewing routines, adjust grind settings and reorder supplies from their phone. What used to be premium specifications two years ago are becoming expected features.

Specialist online retail is capturing the researched purchase

A coffee machine is not an impulse buy. A consumer deciding between a £300 and an £800 machine will typically spend hours comparing specifications, reading reviews and watching video demonstrations before committing. This purchase journey strongly favours retailers who can support the research process.

Specialist online retailers have a clear advantage. They offer a wide range of products, detailed product descriptions, filtering tools and comparison features – something that generalist platforms struggle to provide. A consumer who has spent a week researching different types of grinder types before making a purchase is looking for expert advice, not just a standard household appliances section.

Physical retail is not irrelevant in this category, but its role has changed. Coffee machines are among the more considered purchases a consumer makes in the small appliance segment, and the research happens overwhelmingly online. A consumer who walks in after a week of reading reviews is not starting from scratch. They want hands-on validation, not just an introduction.

What this means for retail ranging and category management

The category rewards range depth more than most domestic appliance segments. A consumer prepared to spend £600 will leave a retailer that only stocks to £300, not because the prices are wrong, but because there is nothing there that speaks to what they are looking for. Mid-to-premium is where the growth is, and it is also where the margin sits.

In this category, communicating technical specifications is more important than promotional prices. Consumers with a budget of between £400 and £800 understand why they are spending more. They compare boiler types and technical specifications, rather than discounts. Retailers who clearly communicate these differences, through product descriptions and the expertise of their staff, achieve better results than those who simply display promotions.

The category also offers cross-selling potential that is often underestimated. A household that invests in a quality espresso machine will regularly buy coffee beans, cleaning products, milk alternatives and accessories. Descaling kits and brewing accessories are typical recurring purchases following the purchase of the machine. To view the initial transaction as a one-off purchase is to miss out on the relationship that follows.

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