
Eureka - Mignon Zero 65 All Purpose (AP)
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Last updated: Dec 23, 2025 Scoring
Second a eureka mignon - Italians make good motors
r/BuyItForLife • Coffee Grinder - Simple , set it once and forget it ->I'd go for a Eureka Zero, I love the grind by weight (GBW) workflow and am getting very consistent shots
r/espresso • Absolutely new to espresso and looking for advice on buying a coffee grinder [$300] ->Have owned all the grinders on your list, at one point or another. Agree that Duo might be your best bet. Ability to play with other 83mm burrs is a good hedge against future curiosity. Recommend getting second (filter) burr option, because having the extra carrier for fast(ish) swaps is nice. Cannot recommend the Eurekas. Good build, very pretty, but burrs are proprietary and the grind chamber/chute design is antediluvian. Fine for hopper base on-demand grinding, but crap for single dosing. Even with the mods (tilted base, bellows), retention is terrible. Eureka's attempts at single-dosing focused grinders are not honest efforts. Just a new model name and superficial accessories. And their new dial is just...stupid. Still not enough ratio to overcome the thread lash in their adjustment screw. The rev counter is nice enough, but a big dial like [this](https://www.amazon.com/ARO-EspressoTM-Eureka-Mignon-Adjustments/dp/B0CLCB8VQ6/ref=asc_df_B0CLCB8VQ6) is much more effective (and not stupid looking, imho) Libra portafilter contact sensor was unreliable. I heard they fixed it, but I had given up already and moved on. When it worked, it was...ok. Weight accuracy wasn't bad, but irrelevant because it was a hot mess of sprayed grounds. RDT absolutely necessary in my environment (20-50%RH over the year), but the extra moisture caused caking/clogging in the chute. From a taste perspective...it's ok. Blendy, decent body, not a lot of clarity. Little unkempt and harsh. Good in milk drinks. Niches - good workflow, probably among the best, even compared against titan grinders at 5x the price. Personally, not a fan of Mazzer burrs. Harsh and bitter finish. The Zero doesn't have any options for their 63mm conical, so you're kinda stuck. The stock Duo espresso burr was, to me, a cleaner version of Zero profile. Other options: Mazzer Philos. The grinder itself is a bit pricey, and rumor has it that the i200D and 189D burrs are big improvements over Mazzer traditional flavor profile - but it's a good platform for 64mm burr space, where you are spoilt for choice and the burrs are cheaper than 83mm. Hope that helps
r/espresso • Grinder Upgrade [£500-1000] ->Eureka Mignon Zero 65 with Black Diamond Espresso Specialty burrs and Comandante C40 for pour overs
r/espresso • What grinder do you use, why, and how much did it cost? ->I have heard from more than one person that these built-in grinders are really very limiting. My daughter has two children, ages two and four, and she uses a separate grinder with a Breville Bambino- she received them right after the youngest was born- and she's quite happy with the arrangement. The Profitec Go is gorgeous but perhaps requires more maintenance? I don't know. Her grinder is a Baratza, which is known for being very loud. Obviously a manual grinder would be as quiet, but if you're drinking several a day it might get old. Eureka Mignon makes very quiet electric grinders- I have the Eureka Mignon Zero, and I like it very much.
r/espresso • Busy, tired parents need help deciding between Breville Barista Express, Profitec GO, or another beginner-friendly rec [$500-$1,100] ->I've owned a Baratza Virtuoso (barely adequate, if that), a Turin DF 64 V. 1, a Niche Zero, and the Eureka Mignon Zero. The Turin was more clarity/fruity forward, though not by much, but I sold that for a Niche Zero. I owned them both for a little while and decided to keep the Niche. The Niche was fine-super user friendly, and easy to clean-but for not-particularly-rational reasons I was drawn to the Eureka (for esthetics mainly), so I sold the Niche. The Niche and the Eureka are both quiet, and great for my preference of dark beans and classic Italian espresso-- really, between the two you can't go wrong. But unless you can find a used Niche there's a big price difference. As I reread my post I sound like a person always after the next thing, but I did eventually stop questing something different!
r/espresso • Espresso grinder recommendations [$400 or less] ->Since the tariff made the the niche zero too expensive i ended up getting the eureka zero 65 which I really like so far, but don't have anything to compare it to except the baraza. TBH just liked the look over the DF64 (and i heard it was loud). I still use the old grinder for drip now since it doesnt really take up any extra usable space, the way its setup.
r/espresso • Good beginner setup?[buying advice needed less than $800] ->The df 64 will do both, it's a pain in the ass to switch between grind sizes all the time though. Id honestly get a df64 and a cheaper one for regular drip coffee. I used to have a df64 for espresso and a capresso grinder for drip. It worked well. I now use my df64 for drip and a libra ap for espresso.
r/espresso • The elusive dual-purpose grinder: Espresso and Pourover [approx $500 CAD]. ->On the bar is a Eureka A65 that is dialed in for espresso. Don't want to mess with that. It is dedicated to espresso. Next to it is a Niche Zero that handles pour overs, AeroPress, and the ocassional request for decaf espresso. It's marvelous. I also have a Mahlkonig K35 that I need to get dialed in or it needs to get off the bar. It has not been very cooperative so far! And I have a hand grinder for travel.
r/espresso • Do you own more than one coffee grinder? [$1000] ->The Eureka Mignon series will grind to the 190-195 micron range depending on which model.
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I have a Eureka zero AP65 for a month now (450€), and I think it's underrated by most people. I really enjoy it
r/espresso • Girlfriend Says Hand Grinder Has to Go - Help Me Choose My First Electric Grinder [~500€] ->For flat burr grinders the Eureka Mignon range has better options imo. Crono, Manuale & Zero are all worth looking into as alternatives for the Ode 2
r/pourover • View on Reddit →Eureka Mignon Zero. Paid €320 for it. I got the zero because I wanted a single dose grinder that was quiet enough to not put everyone in the apartment on edge. And I could get it for a decent price. Overall I'm very happy, retention is great, it's as quiet as I hoped, grounds are not clumpy at all, and it feels like it's built like a tank.
r/espresso • View on Reddit →I just bought a eureka mignon zero and while it's only day one I like it so far. I went too fine on my first grind so I know it can get fine enough. Grinds are consistent. The thing is built well it seems. The body is metal not plastic. Take a look at prices near you
r/JamesHoffmann • View on Reddit →Eureka Mignon will fit your budget. The filtro and zero are 2 options I considered that are on the lower price end of the Eureka grinders. Ended up getting the zero as would be doing more espresso. Very happy with it.
r/JamesHoffmann • View on Reddit →Yeah and in Europe, it makes much more sense to buy Eureka than the DF range as prices are much closer together compared to Stateside where DF makes more sense due to them being that much cheaper than Eurekas. Eurekas are the way to go round this neck of the woods. Built like tanks. Long lasting. Much higher quality compared to DF
r/JamesHoffmann • View on Reddit →Eureka Mignon, Set time, grind size once. Forever after just press the beaker up againÈ™t the grinder to start grinding so really I would call that half a button. It's consistent, can do just about any coffee and precise. It's built like a tank, lasts like a tank, weighs like a tank all while optically oozing the sleek but rugged luxury vibes of a chrome G-Wagon for your kitchen. Its an expensive, delightfully over-engineered flex of a product, but then this is what this community is all about.
r/BuyItForLife • View on Reddit →Are you making medium to dark roasts? What do you/your wife not like about the Bambino? I'd say stick with it and get an electric grinder like a Eureka Mignon. If you're single dosing get a Zero, if you're good with a hopper get a Specialita (time based) or Libra (grind by weight)
r/espresso • View on Reddit →Eureka zero. Within budget and much better built than the DF grinders. Hands down. The DF grinders make more sense in the States where Eureka's are soooo much more expensive. Over here , I would definitely go Eureka. https://www.coffeefriend.co.uk/p/eureka-mignon-zero-55s-15bl-coffee-grinder-matte-black/ No connection to this shop but I have bought items from them before and super happy. However, the zero is not that easy to change from espresso range to pour over range. Therefore , With the money left over I would get something like a P2 for pour overs etc. In total it will be just over £300 (the P2 is around £22 on AliExpress or £34 from Amazon)
r/JamesHoffmann • View on Reddit →I got a home grinder initially so that my coffee wouldn't go stale as fast. Whole beans last longer than preground. Part of the bonus was, hopefully, that I could buy a larger bag for cheaper and still get good coffee for less money per cup. Then I got better at dialing in my grind size and getting the smoothest flavor I could, so now rather than spending ten dollars per kilo of commodity-grade coffee, I'm happy spending twenty per 300g of specialty coffee. 🤣 For the same money, you'll get much better grind quality in a hand grinder than you would for electric. Get a Timemore or 1ZPresso and it'll rival electric grinders costing double or triple as much. It'll take a bit longer, but with the modern class of hand grinders, you're only looking at maybe 45 seconds for a 3-cup pot without working very hard (which is much better than multiple minutes in a Hario Skerton). In electric grinders, the bare minimum I'd recommend would be an Oxo or a Baratza. But I'd rather step up to, say, the DF54, Eureka Mignon series, Urbanic, and some others.
r/mokapot • View on Reddit →Have a look at the Rocket or ECM line of espresso machines. As for grinders, I love the eureka mignon line, and mazzer. 2+K is an easy spend for a home set up. I'm sitting around 3500 now.
r/espresso • View on Reddit →My Eureka Zero has served me pretty well so far too. Basically a single dose version of Specialita
r/espresso • View on Reddit →Ja mám už roky delonghi dedica s vlastným sitkom a pákou (neviem, ako sa to po slovensky správne volá) a eureka mignon mlynÄek. Do 500€ by si sa mal vojsÅ¥.
r/Slovakia • View on Reddit →You might be able to pick up a second hand Eureka Mignon for around that price, that's what I did.
r/espresso • View on Reddit →I also have a JX-Pro and transitioned to electric a few years ago. First I went to the Eureka Silenzio, then to the Mignon Zero. If it was today I would avoid any Eureka at all costs, because they are very tricky to dial in, not good to switch beans due to retention and very often frustrating. The only good thing I can think of, is that they are compact, well built and somewhat quiet. The coffee is...good but nothing special. May I suggest considering the Flair Power Tower to electrify your JX-Pro? The JX-Pro gives the same quality if not better than the DF or any Eureka. The Niche is expensive but you pay for the build, presentation and how clean and easy to dial it. Other good contenders are the Baratzas Sette or the cheapest but still good Encore ESP.
r/espresso • View on Reddit →I use a Eureka Mignon for espresso and a K6 for pour over. I'm very happy with both
r/pourover • View on Reddit →Mignon Zero. Because it's robust and reliable and delivers robust and reliable results.
r/espresso • View on Reddit →Eureka mignon zero has the same silent tech as the Silenzio - pretty much same specs all around except for the digital stuff. And it's a single doser. On sale for 3-400$
r/espresso • View on Reddit →I do. I still have my old Baratza Virtuoso that I bought 8 years ago. Still works great and when I have issues, Baratza's service is excellent. I bought a Eureka Mignon Zero a couple years ago, which I use exclusively for espresso, and I use the Baratza for pourover.
r/espresso • View on Reddit →I have three - Baratza Encore for everything but espresso, Eureka Mignon Zero for espresso, and an OXO grinder as a backup (was in regular use before getting the Encore.)
r/espresso • View on Reddit →1zpresso K ultra (250) and Eureka Mignon zero 65 AP (500) and love both of them. The hand grinder is great and probably the best option hand grinder wise for filter in my opinion unless you are looking for more clarity (yet more difficult to dial in) then go with ZP6 I guess. It is also great on the go for aeropress and I am yet to get a bad cup out of it. the Mignon is for home brewing (mainly espresso but occasional filter as well) and is a great all round performer. Built very well and hopefully will last me a long time.
r/espresso • View on Reddit →we're very close to the same- I have a Baratza Virtuoso (the old base model that's now discontinued) and the Eureka Mignon Zero for espresso. I have loved the Eureka
r/espresso • View on Reddit →Eureka zero and big grinder setting dial from aro. Easy to switch back and forth with new dial, built like a tank, relatively silent.
r/JamesHoffmann • View on Reddit →The Eureka Mignon series will grind to the 190-195 micron range depending on which model.
r/Coffee • View on Reddit →../../../../preview.redd.it/b25z0auh692g1f494.jpeg?width=2135&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=4d6924488954732977db9a1f770a112f4780357a I am using a Mignon Specialita 65 mm flat Burr Grinder and have been extremely satisfied since 2021. Prior to this I had Baratza, a Conical Burr Grinder and I never had great results. Flat Burr are a way too easy to maintain. You can buy one from Coffee.plus Mr. Alok Rajput is the owner and a passionate barista.
r/IndiaCoffee • View on Reddit →Yes, I think they are great. Much less retention than the Mignon we originally bought & then returned. Easy to adjust, reliable. We use it for decaf, V60 & filter in a small cafe.
r/espresso • View on Reddit →Neither the Shardor, Hibrew, or Casabrews are likely to meet your requirement for a 5 year life. The Baratza ESP has the best build quality of any device on your list, but you can still do better. I'd suggest a Gaggia Classic E24 for the machine, and one of the Eureka Mignon grinders. These are high quality products that should last forever if well taken care of. I wouldn't give a lot of credence to the Amazon reviews. Many people buy espresso equipment (especially Breville) without realizing how difficult it is to learn to use. They get rapidly frustrated, blame their problems on the machine, and give it a poor review. Feedback from this sub and other coffee/espresso forums is much more relevant than Amazon ratings.
r/espresso • View on Reddit →Eureka Mignon has a few options, though they'll sit right at that 250-300 price point. They're very solid, good looking, and can do both espresso and drip with enough hopper capacity.
r/JamesHoffmann • View on Reddit →I have Mignon Zero and the baratza encore! Can confirm it's much much much quieter. It made me realize the encore was so loud 😅 Unfortunately, I don't think you'll enjoy using it for both espresso and filter because the dial on the mignon zero can make multiple full revolutions so the markers are mostly meaningless (you have to find the "true zero" yourself). Switching back and forth from espresso to filter would be a nightmare. I kept my encore for drip!
r/espresso • View on Reddit →