VerdictAI

Reviewer consensus · 2026

Best Juicers of 2026What 71 reviewers actually think, trust-weighted

Juicers split sharply into two camps—fast centrifugal extractors and slower masticating cold-press machines—and the reviewers we read rarely agree on which matters more for you. This roundup is a trust-weighted synthesis of independent testing labs, verified-purchase reviewers, and specialist communities like r/Juicing, surfacing where the consensus is strong and where it fractures over yield, cleanup, and leafy-greens performance. We don't test these ourselves; we weight what credible reviewers have already reported.

Sources behind this verdict

71 reviewers, weighted by source trust

71reviewers read

Weighted by source trust

We don’t review products. We read what other reviewers wrote, score each source for trustworthiness, and synthesize the consensus.

How sources are scored →

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Highest-rated by the consensus

#1 of 7
Top pick · #1Breville Juice Fountain Plus JE98XL, Silver
Best overall

Breville Juice Fountain Plus JE98XL, Silver

★★★★★4.5(16,715)86Great

Across the reviewers we read, the Breville Juice Fountain Plus is the most thoroughly vetted machine in this category. techgearlab.com found it "performs exceptionally well when juicing hard produce, like sweet potatoes and beets," and thespruceeats.com described it as a workhorse with two speeds and extra-large capacity.

The rest of the rankings

#2,7

Frequently asked

4 questions
Is a cold-press (masticating) juicer worth it over a centrifugal one?
Specialist-community consensus on r/Juicing is that masticating cold-press juicers extract more juice with less foam and oxidation, and handle leafy greens far better, while centrifugal models are faster and easier to clean but louder and weaker on greens. If you mainly juice hard produce and want speed, centrifugal is fine; if you juice greens or want juice that keeps longer, reviewers lean cold-press.
Why do some cold-press juicers produce so little juice?
Verified-purchase and community reviewers note that yield depends heavily on produce prep and machine design. Several r/Juicing threads flag the Ninja NeverClog producing notably low carrot yields, while users of wide-chute models report much drier pulp. Pulp consistency, auger speed, and how packed the chute is all affect output.
Are the budget Amazon cold-press juicers (Canoly, EanOruus, TUUMIIST) any good?
Community reviewers repeatedly call them strong value—easy to clean, quiet, and good yield for the price—but caution they're not built to the durability standard of a $500 Nama. They're frequently recommended as best-for-the-money starter juicers under $200, with the caveat that long-term reliability data is thinner than for established brands.
What's the easiest juicer to clean?
Across reviewers, wide-chute cold-press models with dishwasher-safe parts (and the centrifugal Breville's simple basket) are cited as quickest to clean, though no juicer is truly mess-free. Several community members note pulp chutes still need clearing mid-session on masticating models.