Buying & budget

Which coffee grinder should beginners buy?

Start with a burr grinder — never a blade model. A hand grinder between 80 and 150 € will carry you through pourover and French press. If you plan to pull espresso at home, budget 250-400 € minimum for an electric: espresso fineness demands a precision that entry-level grinders simply cannot deliver.

The grinder is the most underestimated piece of kit for beginners, yet the most decisive. A rule often attributed to Scott Rao in the third-wave community is that you should spend at least as much on the grinder as on the machine — ideally more. Blade grinders (propellers) chop coffee randomly and produce a chaotic particle distribution, with fines and boulders in the same scoop. Burrs, by contrast, deliver a consistent grind, which is a prerequisite for clean, repeatable extraction.

On a tight budget, a hand grinder is the best entry point. Between 80 and 150 €, several Japanese and Chinese makers offer 38 to 48 mm conical steel burrs that rival electric grinders two to three times the price. The downside is labour: 60 to 90 seconds of cranking for 20 grams. That is fine for a daily pourover, more tiring if you pull six espressos a day. Stepless adjustment, available on some models, allows very fine tuning and is essential for espresso.

For electrics, the decisive threshold sits around 250-400 €. Below that, general-purpose home grinders rarely have the precision for espresso: too noisy, too much retention (coffee left in the chamber), unstable particle size. Above that threshold, you reach 58-64 mm conical burrs engineered for home baristas. A useful number: a good electric grinder keeps 95 % of its value after five years of daily use, while entry-level espresso machines see their group gaskets harden, tubing scale, and resale value collapse.

In Belgium, the specialty ecosystems in Brussels, Ghent and Antwerp have made grinder advice mature: independent roasteries gladly demonstrate a grind in-store, something no supermarket does. Practical rule: if you start with V60 or French press, a 100 € hand grinder will last ten years; if you want espresso, accept the 300 €+ electric tier from day one, or you will repurchase within six months.

Beginner grinder decision grid

ProfileTarget methodBudget rangeRecommended type
Occasional filterFrench press, V6080-120 €Hand grinder, conical burrs
Daily filterV60, Chemex, Aeropress120-180 €Premium hand or dedicated electric
Home espressoPump espresso machine250-400 €Electric, espresso-capable burrs
Dual useFilter + espresso400-600 €Electric on-demand, fine adjustment
To avoidAny method20-50 €Blade / propeller grinder