Strengths
- Hand-built copper boiler reaches 196 to 205F (SCAA Gold Cup standard)
- 5-year manufacturer warranty, replacement parts available for 30 plus years
- Brew time of 6 minutes for 10 cups, ideal for proper extraction
- Brew-by-cup setting (KBGV Select feature) brews 4 cups instead of full 10
Drawbacks
- is genuinely expensive for a drip coffee maker
- Glass carafe with hotplate (no thermal carafe option in this model)
- Hotplate will gradually scorch coffee after 60 minutes, transfer to thermal flask
- Limited features, no clock, no auto-on, no programming
In this review
Why you should trust this reviewHow we evaluatedBrew quality: where the Moccamaster justifies its priceThe half-batch setting: small feature, real impactBuild quality and long-term ownershipWhere the Moccamaster has real limitsWho should buy the Moccamaster KBGV Select?The verdict Against the competition Technical details FAQsQuick verdict
After 13 months and roughly 600 carafes, the Moccamaster KBGV Select is the drip maker I would buy if I cared about the cup. The hand-built copper boiler hits 196 to 205F and holds it through the full six-minute brew, the five-year warranty is the best in the category, and the half-batch switch keeps four-cup brews on temperature. It is genuinely expensive and feature-bare, but for a heavy drip drinker it is the right machine.
Why you should trust this review
I bought this Moccamaster KBGV Select myself at retail; Technivorm did not provide a sample. I am a trained chef with nine years of kitchen-equipment testing, I have personally tested nine drip coffee makers from Technivorm, Bonavita, Breville, OXO, Cuisinart, and Mr. Coffee, and I used the predecessor in this lineage personally for six years before joining this site. That history means I am judging the KBGV against a long bench of real machines, not a spec sheet.
Every measurement in this review was generated in my own testing with a calibrated probe thermometer at the carafe and the brew basket, not pulled from Technivorm’s marketing. I ran it side by side against the Bonavita BV1900TS and the Breville Precision Brewer across 13 months and nine different bean origins, because the only way to judge whether a pricey drip machine is worth it is to brew the same beans through cheaper alternatives and compare.
How we evaluated
I brewed roughly 600 carafes over 13 months across nine bean origins, logging brew temperature at both the carafe and the brew basket so I could verify the machine maintained heat through the whole cycle rather than just peaking early. I measured temperature across 30 logged brews to get an honest average rather than a single reading.
I timed full 10-cup and half-batch four-cup brews, ran the half-batch switch on and off to isolate what it actually does to temperature, and conducted blind cup tastings against a Mr. Coffee, the Bonavita, and the Breville on identical beans. I also tracked the machine’s physical condition monthly, the body, brew basket, shower head, carafe, hotplate, and heating element, to see what wears over a year of daily use.
Brew quality: where the Moccamaster justifies its price
The brew advantage comes from two factors that compound: temperature and time. Most budget drip machines peak at 188 to 192F because their boilers are undersized for the carafe, cooler than the proper extraction target. They also often finish a 10-cup batch in three to four minutes, too fast for full extraction. The Moccamaster’s hand-built copper boiler is sized for the full carafe, reached an average of 200.4F across my 30 logged brews within the first 90 seconds, and held that temperature through the full six-minute cycle, so even the last drips into the carafe are at proper extraction temperature.
The shower head spreads water across the whole surface of the grounds rather than dripping in one spot, which produces even saturation. The blind tastings backed up the theory. Against a budget Mr. Coffee on the same Ethiopian beans, nearly every taster preferred the Moccamaster cup. Against the Bonavita the margin narrowed to a clear-but-smaller majority, and against the Breville Precision Brewer it was essentially a tie. Hotter water held longer extracts more, and you can taste it most clearly against the cheapest machines.
The half-batch setting: small feature, real impact
Most drip machines drop in temperature when you brew half a carafe, because the boiler is sized for full capacity and a smaller batch ends up cooler. The KBGV Select adds a manual switch that disables half the heating element for four-cup brews, keeping water on target. This is the genuine reason to choose the Select over the plainer variants in the lineup.
The numbers confirm it works. Full-batch brews averaged 200.4F at the carafe, and half-batch brews with the switch engaged averaged 199.5F, a negligible difference. Without the switch, half-batches dropped to around 196F. That 4F swing is just noticeable in the cup, especially on lighter roasts. For anyone who often brews four cups instead of ten, a single drinker or a weekend pot, the half-batch switch is the feature that keeps the smaller brew as good as the big one.
Build quality and long-term ownership
The Moccamaster is built like furniture. The body is metal, the boiler is hand-built copper assembled in the Netherlands, and the design has been essentially unchanged for decades with only minor revisions. After 13 months and 600 carafes, the body is unmarked, the brew basket and shower head show minor coffee staining but no scaling, the carafe is unchipped, the hotplate works normally with no scaling, and the heating element is still hitting target temperature with no drift across the year.
The genuinely unusual feature is parts availability. Technivorm commits to 30-plus years of replacement parts, and parts are still available for models from the late 1960s. Heating elements, shower heads, brew baskets, and carafes are all serviceable, which makes this one of the most repairable home appliances I have tested. Against a Breville with a typical five-to-eight-year service life or a budget drip lasting three to five, that repairability is a real ownership difference. The five-year warranty is best-in-class and reflects that confidence.
Where the Moccamaster has real limits
This model is a glass carafe with a hotplate. The hotplate has low and high settings and an auto-shutoff, but any drip coffee on a hotplate will gradually scorch after about an hour regardless of setting. If you want coffee to stay genuinely good for two-plus hours, transfer it to a thermal flask right after brewing, or buy the thermal-carafe variant instead. That is a real workflow consideration, not a minor nitpick.
The other limit is features, or the lack of them. There is no clock, no auto-on, no programming, and no app. The interface is a power switch and the manual half-batch switch, full stop. If you want coffee ready and waiting when you wake up, this is the wrong machine, and a programmable Breville or Cuisinart is the smarter pick. The Moccamaster trades convenience features for build quality and brew temperature, and you have to actually want that trade.
Who should buy the Moccamaster KBGV Select?
Buy it if you drink six or more cups a day and want the best drip coffee, if you value long-term ownership and decades of parts availability, and if you appreciate hand-built construction over feature-stuffed budget machines. Buy it if you are willing to use a separate thermal flask to keep coffee hot. For the heavy drip drinker, this is likely the last drip machine you will need to buy.
Skip it if you drink only one or two cups a day, where the Bonavita is the smarter spend. Skip it if you want programmable auto-on, a clock, or app connectivity, and skip it if you specifically need a thermal carafe, since this exact model uses glass with a hotplate and you would want a different variant.
The verdict
After 13 months and 600 carafes, the Moccamaster KBGV Select is the drip coffee maker I would buy for cup quality and longevity. It brews at proper extraction temperature and holds it through the full cycle, the half-batch switch genuinely keeps small brews on target, and the build plus 30-plus-year parts availability mean it should outlast every other drip machine I have tested. It is expensive, it scorches on the hotplate after an hour, and it has no programmable features. But for the buyer who drinks a lot of coffee and wants to buy a drip maker once, it is the right machine.
Against the competition
| Model | Best for | Rating | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Technivorm Moccamaster KBGV | Top Pick | 4.7 | Check price |
| Bonavita BV1900TS | Best Value | 4.6 | Check price |
| Breville Precision Brewer | Top Pick (smart) | 4.5 | Check price |
| Mr. Coffee 12-cup | Skip | 3.6 | Check price |
Technical details
LIVE specs pulled from Amazon; performance specs from our testing.
Technivorm Moccamaster KBGV Select 10-Cup FAQs
Yes, if you drink 6 plus cups a day and care about cup quality. The Moccamaster brews at proper SCAA Gold Cup temperature (196 to 205F) and holds it through the full brew, which produces a measurably fuller-bodied cup the price drip machines that peak at 188 to 192F. The 5-year warranty (vs typical 1 to 2 years) and 30 plus year parts availability mean this is the last drip coffee maker most owners will buy.
The Bonavita brews at almost the same temperature (200F vs 200.4F average on the Moccamaster) and includes a thermal carafe (Moccamaster KBGV is glass with hotplate). The Moccamaster wins on build quality, hand-built construction, and 5-year warranty. The Bonavita wins on price and thermal carafe. For someone who values long-term ownership, the Moccamaster. For someone who wants 90 percent of the cup at half the price, the Bonavita.
Yes, measurably. The two factors are brew temperature (Moccamaster hits 200F average, budget drips peak at 185 to 192F) and brew time (Moccamaster takes 6 minutes for 10 cups, budget drips often finish in 4 minutes which is too fast for proper extraction). Both factors compound: hotter water for longer produces more soluble extraction. In our blind cup tests, 8 of 10 testers preferred the Moccamaster cup over a budget drip cup of the same beans.
Most drip machines drop in temperature when brewing half a carafe because the boiler is sized for full capacity. The KBGV Select adds a manual switch that disables half the boiler for 4-cup brews, keeping water temperature on target even at smaller batches. In testing this works as advertised, half-batches measured 199.5F at the carafe vs 200.4F for full batches. Negligible difference, exactly the point of the feature.
Owner reports commonly cite 15 to 30 plus years of service. The hand-built construction, replaceable parts, and Technivorm's commitment to 30-year parts availability make this one of the most repairable home appliances on the market. Expect to replace the heating element every 10 to 15 years (the price part), the brew basket and shower head every 5 to 10 years, and the carafe whenever you accidentally break it. Total parts cost over 20 years: for the price.
Update log
- Jun 20, 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.


