Questions, answered straight
The things people actually ask about buying coffee gear in the UK — and about how this site works. Every answer links to the page carrying the live numbers.
Choosing gear
- What espresso machine should I buy in the UK?
- Start from budget and habits, not spec sheets. Under £700 buying a first machine: prioritise steam-on-tap and simplicity, and keep at least £100 of the budget for a burr grinder — it shapes the cup more than the machine does at this level. Our builder pairs machine and grinder against live UK stock in one pass. Best espresso machines for beginners →
- Is it worth buying an expensive coffee grinder?
- Up to a point, yes — grind consistency is the single biggest lever on taste, and a £150 grinder with a £350 machine beats a £20 grinder with a £480 machine every time. Past roughly £500 you're paying for workflow and longevity rather than a better cup at starter level. Best grinders for espresso, live prices →
- Burr or blade coffee grinder?
- Burr, always, for any brew method. Blade grinders chop unevenly and can't hold a setting, so extraction is unpredictable — espresso is impossible on them. Even a modest hand burr grinder outperforms any blade grinder. Hand grinders compared live →
- Is the AeroPress really that good?
- The buyer data says yes: across the UK sellers we track, AeroPress models carry some of the highest rating-count-weighted scores of any coffee gear — thousands of reviews averaging near 4.9★. Every model brews identically; you choose on body material, capacity and travel, not on coffee quality. Which AeroPress should you buy? →
- Is a bean-to-cup machine worth it — and what are the downsides?
- Worth it if you want one-button coffee before 7am: fresh-ground, brewed under real pressure, zero technique. The honest downsides: regular rinse and brew-unit cleaning (skipping it is the #1 cause of bad-tasting bean-to-cup coffee), less cup-quality ceiling than separates at the same total spend, and bulkier footprints than they look. Bean-to-cup machines, priced live →
- Why are bean-to-cup machines so expensive?
- You're buying two machines in one box: a burr grinder plus a pressurised brew unit, with the engineering to move beans, water and grounds between them automatically. That's also why we tell people comparing prices to include a grinder's cost when weighing bean-to-cup against a separates setup. Best bean-to-cup under £500 →
- Can a moka pot make real espresso?
- Not technically — a moka pot brews at roughly 1.5 bar against a machine's 9, so there's no true crema. What it makes is strong, rich, espresso-style coffee that stands up to milk, from a £25–£60 pot with nothing to break. It's the best price-to-strength ratio in coffee. Moka pots, priced live →
- Who makes the best decaf coffee beans in the UK — and which avoid chemicals?
- Look for the process on the label: Swiss Water and mountain water decafs use only water; the sugarcane (EA) method uses a solvent derived from sugarcane fermentation. Roasters name these because they preserve flavour — an unnamed process usually means the cheaper chemical route. Our decaf list only ranks bags with a real review track record. Best decaf beans, live UK prices →
- Are supermarket coffee beans any good?
- They're not bad — they're old. By the time a bag reaches a supermarket shelf, months have usually passed since roasting, and coffee is fresh produce. The same money at a UK roaster buys beans roasted that week, which matters more than any origin story on the packaging. How fresh should beans be? →
About extracted.coffee
- What is extracted.coffee?
- A UK price-comparison and guided-buying site for home coffee gear and beans, built on live scans of independent Shopify sellers that ship to the UK. Every price shows when it was verified; rankings are by UK stock and buyer ratings, never by commission; and our price ledger powers verified deals, per-product price history and open data studies. How it works →
- How does extracted.coffee make money?
- Affiliate commission on some outbound links — disclosed next to every monetised link. Commission never affects prices, rankings or what qualifies for a page; those rules are enforced in code, and the criteria on each page are the actual filters the code applies. Our methodology →
- How often are prices checked?
- Scans run through the day, every day, and every price on the site carries its own verified-at timestamp. Price-drop alerts send the moment a scan verifies a drop on something you've saved — the deals page refreshes hourly. This week's verified drops →
- Can I cite or reuse your price data?
- Yes — with attribution to extracted.coffee. Our data studies publish as permanent dated editions with open CSV downloads under CC BY 4.0, and the methodology section of each edition states exactly what the numbers can and can't support. The data →
- Why do some products have no 'best' ranking?
- Because they haven't earned one yet: nothing appears on a best-for page without at least 10 buyer reviews averaging 4.0★ or higher. We'd rather show a proven 4.3★ than an unreviewed 5★ — an unranked product isn't bad, it's unproven. The review bar, explained →