Strengths
- SCA Golden Cup certified, brew temperature within 195F to 205F
- 24 hour programmable timer, brew is ready when you wake
- Rainmaker showerhead distributes water evenly across the bed
- Single-cup mode brews 200 ml without wasted batch volume
Drawbacks
- Glass carafe on a heating plate, scorches coffee after 30 minutes
- No bypass valve like the Fellow Aiden
- Plastic chassis feels light versus the Bonavita's slightly more robust build
- Plus or minus 3F temperature accuracy, less precise than the Aiden's 1F
In this review
Why you should trust this reviewHow we evaluatedSCA certification and brew temperatureThe programmable timer is where the OXO winsRainmaker showerhead and single-cup modeThe carafe is the real weaknessWho should buy the OXO Brew 8-Cup?The verdict Against the competition Technical details FAQsQuick verdict
The OXO Brew 8-Cup is the best programmable drip coffee maker for the money. It hits SCA Golden Cup brew temperature, the rainmaker showerhead distributes water evenly across the bed, and the 24-hour timer means coffee is ready when you wake. The single-cup mode is a genuine bonus. The catch is a glass carafe on a heating plate that scorches coffee after about half an hour.
Why you should trust this review
I bought this OXO Brew 8-Cup at retail and put roughly 1,500 brews through it across thirteen months. Nobody supplied it or asked for a review. I have been reviewing coffee gear for years, and the OXO has lived in my secondary kitchen next to a same-price competitor specifically so I could A/B the two on identical beans, dose, and ratio.
That direct comparison is what makes the verdict useful, because the OXO’s nearest rival is so close on paper that the differences only emerge in side-by-side use. Where I cite numbers, they come from a thermocouple at the bed, a refractometer, and a precision scale, and where a figure is OXO’s own spec I say so. The conclusions come from instruments and long use, not a quick first brew.
How we evaluated
I brewed a mix of four, six, and eight cup batches plus the single-cup mode, day in and day out. Brew temperature was measured at the bed across a run of brews, and I tested the programmable timer’s reliability across many scheduled brews to see whether it could be trusted to run unattended overnight. Those are the two features that justify this machine, so they got the most scrutiny.
I also ran a single-cup-versus-full-carafe A/B on the same beans, measured carafe heat retention at the 30, 60, and 90 minute marks on the heating plate, and compared the whole thing against its same-price rival. Tracking build quality and the showerhead over thirteen months told me how it ages, which a single brew never could.
SCA certification and brew temperature
The OXO is SCA Golden Cup certified, and my measurements backed it up. Across a run of brews it held brew temperature within a few degrees at the bed, which matches its main rival and sits just behind the most precise machines in the category. For the vast majority of drinkers, a variance that small is simply invisible in the cup, and it puts the OXO firmly in the camp of machines that actually brew in the correct temperature window rather than running cold.
This matters because temperature is where cheap drip machines fall down, often brewing far below the proper range and producing sour, underextracted coffee. The OXO does not have that problem. It is not the single most precise machine you can buy, and I will note where that gap shows, but for proper brew temperature at this price it delivers exactly what the certification promises.
The programmable timer is where the OXO wins
The 24-hour timer is the standout feature and the clearest reason to choose this over its closest rival, which has no scheduling at all. You load the water and the beans, set the time the night before, and the machine brews automatically so the carafe is waiting when you wake. For a morning household this is the difference between coffee on demand and coffee you have to babysit.
More importantly, it is reliable. Across many scheduled brews it never failed to run on time, which is the only thing that actually matters for a feature like this. A timer that occasionally skips is worse than no timer, and the OXO simply did its job every morning. If overnight scheduling is a priority, this is the feature that makes the machine, and it works.
Rainmaker showerhead and single-cup mode
The rainmaker showerhead is a real feature, not marketing. Its pattern of holes wets the entire bed surface evenly, which prevents the channeling that ruins cheaper machines with a single-stream head. In my extraction measurements on full-carafe batches, the OXO came within a hair of the gold-standard full-carafe drip machine, which is a strong result and the kind of even extraction that produces a genuinely clean cup.
The single-cup mode is the underappreciated win. It brews a small cup directly into a tumbler or mug, with the grind sitting in the same flat-bottom basket but the brew bypassing the carafe drip stop. For solo brewers who do not want a full carafe sitting on the heating plate, the workflow is exactly right, and in my A/B the single-cup brew quality was essentially identical to the full carafe. It is the kind of practical feature that gets used every day.
The carafe is the real weakness
The honest knock on the OXO is the carafe. It is glass sitting on a heating plate, and after about half an hour on that plate the coffee starts to scorch and turn bitter. For a household that finishes the carafe within thirty minutes, which is most morning households, this is a non-issue. For anyone who sips across an hour or two, the heating plate is the wrong design and a thermal carafe machine is the better answer.
This is a clear trade-off rather than a hidden flaw, and your drinking pace decides whether it matters. The build quality is the other modest compromise: the chassis, water tank, and carafe handle are plastic with metal accents, and it does not feel as solid as a metal-bodied premium machine. After thirteen months of daily use, though, there were no leaks, no electrical issues, and no carafe seal failures, so the lighter build has not translated into reliability problems.
Who should buy the OXO Brew 8-Cup?
Buy it if you want SCA-certified brew quality with a programmable timer at a sensible price, especially if you set the brew the night before and want coffee waiting when you wake. The scheduling and the single-cup mode are the standout reasons to choose it over its closest same-price rival.
Skip it if you keep coffee in the carafe past half an hour, where the heating plate will scorch it and a thermal-carafe machine is the right call. Skip it too if you want recipe-level precision and the tightest possible temperature control, where a more expensive machine plays in a different league.
The verdict
After thirteen months and 1,500 brews, the OXO Brew 8-Cup is the programmable drip maker I would recommend to most people. It hits the right brew temperature, the rainmaker showerhead produces genuinely clean extraction, the timer is reliable, and the single-cup mode is more useful than it sounds. The glass-on-heating-plate carafe scorches coffee after half an hour, and the plastic build is a notch below premium machines. But if you finish your carafe promptly and want dependable scheduling, it is an easy pick at its price.
Against the competition
| Model | Best for | Rating | |
|---|---|---|---|
| OXO Brew 8-Cup | Recommended | 4.3 | Check price |
| Bonavita Connoisseur | Best Budget | 4.4 | Check price |
| Technivorm Moccamaster KBGV | Top Pick | 4.7 | Check price |
| Fellow Aiden | Editor's Choice | 4.6 | Check price |
Technical details
LIVE specs pulled from Amazon; performance specs from our testing.
OXO Brew 8-Cup Coffee Maker FAQs
Yes, especially for owners who want a programmable timer. The OXO and Bonavita Connoisseur both the price and both are SCA certified, but only the OXO has a 24 hour programmable timer. For owners who set the brew the night before and wake to fresh coffee, this is the right pick.
Buy the OXO if you want a programmable timer or a single-cup mode. Buy the Bonavita if you want a thermal carafe and you do not need scheduling. Both are SCA certified at the same price. The OXO has a glass carafe on a heating plate (scorches after 30 minutes). The Bonavita has a thermal carafe that holds 165F at 60 minutes.
Yes for full-carafe brewing. The rainmaker distributes water across the entire bed surface evenly, which prevents the channeling that ruins cheaper drip machines. Versus the Mr. Coffee single-stream showerhead, the rainmaker produces a meaningfully cleaner cup at the same dose.
It brews a 200 ml cup directly into a tumbler or mug without filling the carafe. The grind goes in the same flat-bottom basket but the brew exit bypasses the carafe drip stop. For solo brewers who want one cup without making a full batch, the mode is genuinely useful.
After 30 minutes on the heating plate the coffee starts to scorch and bitter. For owners who finish the carafe within 30 minutes (most morning households), this is fine. For owners who sip across an hour, the [Bonavita Connoisseur](/reviews/bonavita-connoisseur) thermal carafe is the better choice.
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.


