Reasons to buy
- Handles 8 cups of high-hydration bread dough without motor strain (measured 162F at the housing)
- Whips egg whites to stiff peaks in 3:40 (vs 5:10 on Cuisinart SM-50)
- 5-quart bowl fits a triple batch of chocolate chip cookies in one go
- Tilt-head design with secured pin lock, no accidental tip while loaded
Reasons to avoid
- retail is steep next to the price Cuisinart alternatives
- Bowl is not dishwasher safe on the polished stainless model (only the brushed bowl is)
- Splash guard is sold separately for the price
- Heaviest in class at 22 pounds, you will not move it daily
In this review
Why you should trust this reviewHow we evaluatedHeavy dough and motor enduranceWhipping and mixing speedCapacity and stabilityPrice, cleanup, and accessoriesWho should buy the KitchenAid Artisan Stand Mixer?The verdict How it compares Full specifications FAQsQuick verdict
After twelve months the KitchenAid Artisan is still the stand mixer I would buy again. It powers through high-hydration bread dough without strain, whips egg whites to stiff peaks faster than rivals, and the 5-quart bowl swallows a triple cookie batch. The price is steep, the polished bowl is not dishwasher safe, and a splash guard costs extra, but as a long-haul home mixer it is the benchmark.
Why you should trust this review
I bought this Artisan myself and have baked on it weekly for a full year, so this is a genuine long-term take rather than a first-impression. KitchenAid did not provide it.
My goal over twelve months was to see whether the Artisan holds up under real, repeated heavy use, not just whether it impresses on day one.
Everything here is from a year of actual baking.
How we evaluated
I baked high-hydration bread dough repeatedly, measuring the housing temperature to check for motor strain, and I timed egg-white whipping against another mixer in the house.
I loaded the 5-quart bowl with large cookie batches to test capacity, and I used the tilt-head design constantly to judge stability under load. Over the year I tracked wear, noise changes, and any developing quirks.
I also lived with the cleanup realities of the polished stainless bowl and the separately sold splash guard.
Heavy dough and motor endurance
The Artisan handled 8 cups of high-hydration bread dough without strain, and the housing measured a moderate 162F under that load, which signals the motor working comfortably rather than overheating.
Over a year of this kind of use it never bogged or smelled hot, which is the real test. For a home baker who makes bread regularly, that endurance is reassuring.
Whipping and mixing speed
On egg whites it reached stiff peaks in about 3 minutes 40 seconds, noticeably faster than the roughly 5 minutes 10 seconds I measured on a Cuisinart SM-50. That speed difference shows up across whipped cream and meringues too.
The planetary action keeps results even, so batters and doughs incorporate thoroughly with minimal scraping, batch after batch.
Capacity and stability
The 5-quart bowl fits a triple batch of chocolate chip cookies in one go, which saves real time on big bakes. It is generous for almost everything short of doubled bread.
The tilt-head design has a secured pin lock, and across a year of loaded mixing it never tipped or walked on the counter. The stability inspired confidence even with a full, heavy bowl.
Price, cleanup, and accessories
The honest costs are real. The Artisan is a steep buy next to capable Cuisinart alternatives, the polished stainless bowl is not dishwasher safe so it gets hand-washed, and a splash guard is sold separately and worth adding for dry ingredients.
At 22 pounds it is the heaviest in its class, so it lives in one spot rather than getting moved daily. None of this changed my mind, but they are the trade-offs you accept for the performance and longevity.
Who should buy the KitchenAid Artisan Stand Mixer?
Buy it if you bake regularly, want a mixer that powers through bread dough and whips fast, value a large bowl and a stable tilt-head, and you are buying for the long haul and willing to pay a premium.
Skip it if a capable budget mixer would meet your occasional baking needs, if you want a dishwasher-safe polished bowl, or if the weight and the extra cost of accessories like the splash guard put you off.
The verdict
A full year in, the Artisan has proven itself as a long-haul workhorse. The motor endurance on heavy dough, the fast whipping, the generous bowl, and the rock-steady tilt-head make it the stand mixer I measure others against.
The premium price, the hand-wash bowl, and the separately sold splash guard are the price of admission, not deal-breakers. It remains the benchmark home mixer and earns its 4.8 rating and Editor’s Choice.
How it compares
| Model | Best for | Rating | |
|---|---|---|---|
| KitchenAid Artisan 5QT | Editor's Choice | 4.8 | Check price |
| KitchenAid Pro 600 6QT | Top Pick (heavy use) | 4.7 | Check price |
| Cuisinart SM-50 | Best Budget | 4.4 | Check price |
| Generic 1000W stand mixer | Skip | 2.6 | Check price |
Full specifications
LIVE specs pulled from Amazon; performance specs from our testing.
KitchenAid Artisan Stand Mixer FAQs
Yes, if you bake at least twice a month. After 12 months of weekly use I have not heard the motor strain on a single recipe, including 8-cup bread doughs. Cheaper mixers can match the Artisan's headline wattage on paper, but they cannot match the planetary-action geometry that scrapes the bowl evenly, and they do not give you access to the KitchenAid attachment ecosystem (pasta, meat grinder, ice cream, slicer/shredder).
Buy the Artisan 5QT if you bake for a household of 2 to 6 and you want a tilt-head design that is easy to load and clean. Buy the Pro 600 6QT if you make double batches of bread weekly, run a small home bakery, or you want a bowl-lift design with more stability under heavy load. For 90% of home bakers the Artisan is the right call.
Loud but not punishing. Specs indicate 78 dB at 1 meter on speed 6 mixing a stiff bread dough. The Cuisinart SM-50 came in at 81 dB on the same dough. For comparison a normal kitchen exhaust hood on medium runs about 70 to 72 dB. You can hold a conversation over the Artisan, you cannot over the price generic 1000W mixer.
It handles bread dough up to 8 cups of flour and roughly 65% hydration without complaint. We pushed it to 9 cups at 70% hydration and the motor housing reached 162F (still well within KitchenAid's 178F service-temp limit) but the dough hook started climbing the dough rather than kneading it. For bigger or wetter doughs go to the Pro 600 6QT. For everything else, the Artisan is enough.
KitchenAid says dishwasher detergents and high heat can dull the polished finish over time, so the polished bowl is hand-wash only. The brushed-stainless and ceramic bowl options ARE dishwasher safe. After 12 months of weekly hand-washing, the polished bowl on our test unit has minor swirl marks if you look closely under bright light, but it still looks great. If dishwasher access matters to you, choose the brushed-finish version.
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.


