What we liked
- Slider lid prevents splash without needing a screw-down seal
- Holds coffee drink-hot for 4 hours in our cooled kitchen testing
- Stainless interior with no plastic flavor after 9 months of daily use
What we didn't like
- Not a leak-proof lid, do not throw it in a bag horizontally
- 14 oz is on the smaller side, you may want the 16 oz version for travel
- Painted exterior shows scratches by month 6 if you carry it daily in a bag
In this review
Why you should trust this reviewHow we evaluatedHeat and cold retentionThe slider lidDurability and dishwasher lifeValue against Yeti and StanleyWho should buy the Ello Cole tumbler?The verdict Versus the alternatives Specs at a glance FAQsQuick verdict
After nine months of daily coffee, iced drinks, and roughly 200 dishwasher cycles, the Ello Cole 14oz Vacuum Tumbler is the cleanest budget insulated tumbler I keep recommending. Coffee stays drink-hot for about four hours, ice lasts around nine, and the slider lid is genuinely splash-resistant. Yeti is tougher and Stanley holds heat longer, but for a daily desk-side drink, the Ello is the right answer.
Why you should trust this review
Our team bought this tumbler at full retail and used it every day for nine months before publishing. Ello did not send a sample and had no idea it was being tested. I have spent years testing kitchen and drinkware gear, with a particular focus on insulated tumblers and bottles, so I know how much of this category coasts on marketing claims that fall apart after a few weeks of real use. A tumbler is the kind of product where the only honest test is to actually drink out of it daily, run it through the dishwasher, and see what survives.
That is the bias I bring, and it is the useful kind. I am not reporting a one-day heat test from a controlled lab. I am reporting what happened to a tumbler that lived on a desk, got thrown in bags, took an accidental drop, and went through the dishwasher week after week. That is how you actually find out whether the insulation holds, whether the lid keeps working, and whether the finish lasts.
How we evaluated
I ran the Ello through the same protocol I use on every tumbler, then extended it well past the minimum to nine months. For heat retention I poured in coffee at 180F in a 72F room, sealed it, and measured how long it stayed above the 130F drink-hot threshold. For cold I used a cup of ice plus a cup of cold water in the same room and timed how long the last visible cube survived. I also ran a splash test by filling it and sliding it across a counter, and a controlled drop from desk height onto hardwood.
Alongside the lab-style tests, the tumbler simply got used. Daily coffee duty during the week, iced drinks on weekends, and more than 200 logged top-rack dishwasher cycles. I ran it side by side against a Yeti Rambler and a Stanley Quencher so the numbers would have real context rather than sitting in a vacuum. Everything below comes from that nine-month record.
Heat and cold retention
On the coffee test, the Ello held above the 130F drink-hot mark for four hours in a 72F room. For comparison on the identical test, the Yeti hit five hours and the Stanley six. So the Ello loses on paper, but think about how a desk tumbler actually gets used. Most people sip a coffee over two to three hours, well inside the Ello’s window, which means four hours of drink-hot coverage is genuinely enough for the job.
The gap widens at the cold end. The Ello kept ice for about nine hours, while the Yeti stretched to thirteen and the Stanley to eleven on the same test. If you want an iced drink that survives a full eight-hour workday and then some, the Yeti is the better tool. But for an iced coffee that needs to stay cold from morning through lunch, nine hours covers it comfortably. The Ello is not the retention champion, and it does not need to be for daily desk duty.
The slider lid
The Ello uses a slide-to-open lid rather than a screw-on cap, and understanding what that lid is and is not is the most important thing in this review. It is splash-resistant, not leak-proof. In testing it stayed splash-tight through all the normal counter handling a desk drink sees, sliding it around, setting it down, picking it up one-handed. It does exactly what it is designed to do when the tumbler is upright.
What it will not do is survive being laid on its side in a bag. Tip it horizontal and it leaks, full stop. That is a deliberate trade-off at this price, not a defect. A true leak-proof seal would add cost and kill the easy one-handed sip that makes the slider format pleasant to use at a desk. So treat it for what it is, an upright desk and cup-holder tumbler, and the lid is excellent. Treat it as a commuter bottle to toss in a backpack, and it will disappoint you. For that job, you want a screw-down lid or a sealed bottle instead.
Durability and dishwasher life
This is where nine months of real use pays off. The stainless interior showed no plastic taste and no funk after all that coffee, which is not a given in budget tumblers. The vacuum insulation still measured within about ten percent of its day-one heat-retention numbers at the nine-month mark, so the core function held up. The slider lid still moved cleanly with no sticking, grit, or seizing, which is often the first thing to fail on cheaper slider designs.
It is not flawless. The painted exterior picked up minor scratches by around month six from being carried in a bag, and a desk-height drop onto hardwood left one small dent, though the insulation kept working through it. Over 200 top-rack dishwasher cycles produced no interior paint chipping and only light exterior scratching. None of this affects how the tumbler performs. It just means it looks used after months of being used, which is fair for the price.
Value against Yeti and Stanley
Here is the honest framing. The Yeti Rambler is genuinely the better tumbler. Its lid is tighter, it holds heat and cold longer, the exterior paint resists scratches better, and the whole thing looks and feels more premium. If you want a tumbler that survives a job site and comes with a long warranty, that is the one to buy, and I will not pretend the Ello matches it.
What the Ello does is deliver most of that experience for noticeably less. In rough terms you get around three quarters of the Yeti’s performance at a meaningfully lower cost. For routine, upright, desk-side use, that gap is the difference between premium polish and simple sufficiency, and sufficiency is all the daily routine actually requires. The Stanley sits in between, holding heat the longest of the three, if maximum heat retention is your single priority. The Ello’s case is that it covers the everyday job cleanly without asking you to pay for ruggedness you may never use.
Who should buy the Ello Cole tumbler?
Buy it if: you want a daily desk-side coffee or water tumbler that drops into a standard cup holder, you like the one-handed slider format, and you want real vacuum insulation without paying a premium. For a tumbler that lives at a desk or in a car, this is the right tool and the right price.
Skip it if: you carry your tumbler loose in a backpack and need a true leak-proof seal, you want the longest possible heat retention and should look at the Stanley Quencher, or you want a rugged exterior that survives a job site and should step up to the Yeti Rambler. The Ello is built for routine, not for abuse.
The verdict
After nine months and around 200 dishwasher cycles, the Ello Cole 14oz Vacuum Tumbler proved itself the cleanest budget pick in its class. It holds coffee drink-hot for four hours, keeps ice for nine, and the splash-resistant slider lid does exactly what it should as long as you keep the tumbler upright. It is not leak-proof, the paint scratches, and it loses the retention contest to pricier rivals, but none of that undercuts the daily job it is built for. For a desk or cup-holder tumbler at a budget price, it is the one I keep reaching for and the one I keep recommending.
Versus the alternatives
| Model | Best for | Rating | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ello Cole 14oz Vacuum Tumbler | Best Budget | 4.5 | Check price |
| Yeti Rambler 14oz Mug with MagSlider | Editor's Choice | 4.8 | Check price |
| Stanley Quencher 14oz Tumbler | Best Heat Retention | 4.7 | Check price |
| No-name stainless 16oz tumbler | Skip | 2.5 | Check price |
Specs at a glance
LIVE specs pulled from Amazon; performance specs from our testing.
Ello Cole Vacuum Tumbler 14oz Stainless FAQs
Yes, for a daily desk tumbler. The price with double-wall vacuum insulation, a slider lid, and 4-hour drink-hot retention on coffee, the Ello sits in the right value bracket. The Yeti at this price holds heat about an hour longer and retains ice 4 hours longer in our comparison. The Stanley at this price holds heat 2 hours longer. The Ello is 75% of the performance for 67% of the Yeti price.
Buy the Ello Cole if you use the tumbler at a desk or in a car cup holder and you want the slider lid format at a budget price. Buy the Yeti Rambler if you carry the tumbler in a bag, you want the MagSlider lid quality, or you want the longer heat-retention spec. The Yeti is genuinely better. The Ello is enough for daily routine use.
No, it is splash-resistant, not leak-proof. The slider lid keeps coffee from splashing out when you set the tumbler down on a desk, but it will leak if you drop it on its side in a bag. For a true leak-proof seal, you need a screw-down lid like the Hydro Flask Coffee or a sealed bottle. The Ello is designed for desk-side use, not for transport in a bag.
Roughly 9 hours in our standardized test (1 cup of ice plus 1 cup of cold water, sealed lid, room temp at 72F, ice melted to last visible cube). The Yeti hit 13 hours on the same test. The Stanley hit 11 hours. The no-name competitor hit 4 hours. For an iced coffee in the morning that needs to stay cold through lunch, the Ello is fine.
Update log
- Jun 21, 2026: Review published.
- Jun 25, 2026: Current Amazon price and availability refreshed.
Pricing and availability are pulled live from Amazon on every visit, never hardcoded.


