Food waste accounts for a significant share of household landfill contributions. A dedicated food waste composter lets you divert fruit peels, vegetable trimmings, coffee grounds, and eggshells into nutrient-rich compost for your garden. The options range from countertop electric units to large outdoor tumblers, and choosing the right one depends on how much waste you generate, whether you have outdoor space, and how fast you want results.
| Product | Best For | Rating |
|---|---|---|
| FCMP Outdoor IM4000 Tumbler | Active composters with yards | 4.6/5 |
| Lomi Electric Composter | Apartment kitchens | 4.5/5 |
| SCD Probiotics Bokashi Bin | Meat and dairy inclusion | 4.4/5 |
| Envirocycle Composting Tumbler | Liquid fertilizer access | 4.5/5 |
| OXO Good Grips Compost Bin | Countertop collection | 4.7/5 |
FCMP Outdoor IM4000 Tumbler - Best Outdoor Tumbler
The FCMP IM4000 is one of the most popular outdoor composters in North America for good reason. The dual-chamber design lets you add fresh material to one side while the other side finishes composting, keeping the process continuous. The BPA-free plastic heats up well in sunlight, accelerating breakdown. Ventilation ports and deep fins help aeration without manual turning that most open bins require. At around 37 gallons total capacity it handles the waste output of a typical family kitchen. Assembly takes about an hour and the unit is stable on uneven ground.
Lomi Electric Composter - Best for Apartments
Lomi sits on your kitchen counter and converts food scraps into a dry, soil-like output in as little as four hours using a combination of heat, abrasion, and beneficial microbes. It handles most kitchen scraps including small amounts of meat and dairy, which standard composters cannot. The output needs to be mixed into garden soil or potting mix rather than used directly, but it dramatically reduces the volume and odor of food waste. It is quiet enough for kitchen use and the activated carbon filters manage odor effectively. The main downside is the upfront cost and electricity use.
SCD Probiotics Bokashi Bin - Best for Meat and Dairy
Bokashi is a fermentation system rather than traditional composting, which means it can handle cooked foods, meat, and dairy that standard composters cannot. The SCD Probiotics bin uses a bran inoculated with effective microorganisms to ferment all food waste in about two weeks. The output is buried in garden soil or added to a compost pile, where it breaks down quickly. The liquid runoff is diluted and used as liquid fertilizer. The system is fully odor-sealed when closed. Best for households that want zero food waste diversion, including proteins.
Envirocycle Composting Tumbler - Best for Liquid Fertilizer
Envirocycle differentiates itself with a base that collects compost tea, the liquid that drains from breaking-down material. This liquid fertilizer can be diluted and applied directly to plants as a nutrient boost. The 35-gallon drum is easy to roll, and the entire unit is made from BPA-free recycled plastic. Compost quality is high when the brown-to-green ratio is maintained. It is a compact footprint for its capacity and looks tidier than open bin systems. The liquid collection feature is genuinely useful for gardeners who want both solid compost and liquid fertilizer from one system.
OXO Good Grips Compost Bin - Best Countertop Collector
This OXO unit is not a composter in the traditional sense but rather a countertop collection bin that stages kitchen scraps before transferring them to an outdoor composter. It earns its place on this list because a good collection bin is the first step in a functional food waste system. The lid seals tightly to control odor, the capacity is 1.75 gallons (enough for two to three days of typical kitchen waste), and the soft-grip handle makes carrying it outside easy. Dishwasher-safe and durable. Pair it with any outdoor composter on this list.
How to Choose a Composter for Food Waste
Start with your living situation. Apartment dwellers without outdoor space need a countertop electric composter or Bokashi system. Those with a yard can use a tumbler or open bin. Next, consider what food waste you generate. If you produce meat and dairy scraps, standard composters will not work well, so a Bokashi or electric unit is the better route. Speed matters too: if you want finished compost quickly, tumblers and electric units outperform slow open bins. Finally, factor in how much ongoing effort you are willing to contribute. Tumblers require periodic turning; electric units run themselves.
For more context on building a complete composting system, see our guides to best composters for home use and best composters for small spaces. Every product rating follows the process described at /methodology.
Frequently asked questions
Can I compost meat and dairy in a standard food waste composter?+
Most traditional bin and tumbler composters are not recommended for meat, dairy, or cooked foods because these attract pests and create odor problems. Electric composters and Bokashi systems can handle a wider range of food waste including proteins. If you want to compost everything, an electric countertop composter or Bokashi fermentation system is the more appropriate choice.
How long does it take a food waste composter to produce usable compost?+
A tumbler composter with good brown-to-green balance typically produces compost in four to eight weeks during warm months. Standard open bins can take three to six months. Electric composters produce a finished soil amendment in as little as four hours, though the output is dehydrated material that still benefits from curing in soil. Bokashi takes about two weeks to ferment before burial.