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Breville Barista Pro vs Breville Barista Touch

Honest head-to-head from real owner consensus
It's close — Breville Barista Pro (7.1) and Breville Barista Touch (6.9) score nearly the same. Pick on the trade-offs that matter to you.
Dimension by dimension
 ProTouch
Reliability & Durability 6.7 6.7
User Sentiment 8.2 7.1
Complaint Severity 7.0 7.0
Consensus Strength 2.1 3.3
Value for Money 4.8 5.1
Owner Advocacy 7.6 7.4
Breville Barista Pro

A genuinely fast-heating machine with strong steaming power, held back by a grinder that can't keep up with your ambitions. The built-in burr set struggles with lighter roasts, offers frustratingly coarse jumps between settings, and has a track record of motor failures around the 18-24 month mark, especially if you push it beyond darker beans. Buy it if you're making milk drinks with supermarket espresso and value the compact footprint, but anyone serious about dialing in single-origin shots will hit the ceiling in six months and wish they'd bought a Bambino Plus and spent the difference on a real grinder.

Breville Barista Touch

This is a genuinely capable espresso machine handcuffed to a grinder that quits before the warranty does. The touchscreen interface and automatic milk wand deliver on the cafe-at-home promise, fast heat-up, consistent microfoam, intuitive controls, but the integrated grinder produces uneven particle distribution from day one and fails outright at 18-24 months for enough owners that you should budget for a standalone grinder immediately. Breville-only service means long waits when the solenoid or touchscreen fails, and most buyers who stick with it eventually route around the grinder entirely to unlock what the boiler can actually do. Buy this if you're prepared to treat it as a very good espresso machine with a disposable grinder attached, or save yourself two years of dial-in frustration and pair a Bambino Plus with a real grinder instead.