Best coffee grinders for espresso
Espresso is the least forgiving brew method a grinder can face: it needs a fine, consistent grind with small, repeatable adjustments. Blade grinders can't do it at all, and many cheap burr grinders can't go fine enough. This list is assembled from a live scan of UK-shipping sellers, and only grinders with a real track record qualify.
Cheapest UK price for an espresso-capable burr grinder that clears our review bar right now: £154.95 at Coffee Hit, as of 7 Jul 2026, 13:06 — from extracted.coffee’s live scan of 31 sellers shipping to the UK (48 listings).
Prices range £72.00 (import)–£500.00 · median £220.08 · incl. VAT, excl. shipping · cheapest in the full scan, before our review bar: £72.00
We may earn a commission on these links — it never affects prices or rankings. How we track prices →
How we picked
6 grinders qualified from 48 live listings scanned at 7 Jul 2026, 13:06. The bar, in full:
- Rated 4.0★ or higher by at least 10 buyers — unreviewed listings never make a “best” list, however good the price
- £40–£500 — real espresso-capable money without enthusiast-upgrade prices
- One slot per product — colour and finish variants collapse into a single card, and multi-piece bundle sets don't qualify
- UK sellers ranked first; imports are badged, never hidden
- Ranked by buyer rating weighted by review count — commission never affects the order
The picks


Order is UK sellers first, then buyer rating weighted by review count. Commission never affects it. How we rank → · See all coffee grinders →
Grinder questions, answered straight
- Why does the grinder matter more than the machine?
- Because extraction quality is set by grind consistency. A capable machine can't fix uneven grounds, but a good grinder makes a modest machine sing — which is why we tell beginners to protect the grinder's share of the budget.
- Can I use a blade grinder for espresso?
- No. Blade grinders chop unevenly and can't hold a fine setting, so shots run wildly fast or choke. Espresso needs burrs — flat or conical — with fine adjustment.
- Is a hand grinder good enough for espresso?
- A good one, yes — hand grinders with steel conical burrs and fine stepped or stepless adjustment routinely outperform electric grinders at the same price. The trade is about a minute of cranking per double shot.
- What does “single dose” mean?
- You weigh in exactly the beans for one drink instead of keeping a full hopper. It keeps beans fresher and makes switching coffees easy — handy, not essential.
Grinder is half the story
Pair it with the right machine inside your total budget — the builder does both at once, priced by the cup.
Pull my setup →


