Home / Kitchen / Best Sous Vide Machines of 2026 Compared by a Home Cook
BUYING GUIDE · 2026

Best Sous Vide Machines of 2026 Compared by a Home Cook

MDBy Morgan Davis, Home & Kitchen Editor· Updated Jun 2026· 5 picks tested
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🏆 Our Top Pick
Anova Precision Cooker Pro
★ 1,200 W

Anova Precision Cooker Pro

The Anova Pro is the workhorse I use for restaurant style cooks. The 1,200 watt heating element brings 5 gallons of water from cold tap to 135 degrees in under 20 minutes, which matters when you forget to start the bath in advance. Temperature stability across 8 hour cooks held within 0.1 degree. The Wi-Fi app is reliable now, after years of growing pains. Build quality feels commercial grade, with a metal sleeve over the pump. The price is high, but if you sous vide weekly, this is the unit that won't burn out.

Yes, Wi-Fi Key feature
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I compared sous vide immersion circulators from Anova, Breville Joule, Inkbird, and Instant Pot to find which one cooks evenly, holds temperature, and survives daily use.

I started cooking sous vide because I kept overcooking expensive steaks. Five years and four circulators later, I have strong opinions about which machines actually earn the counter space. I ran the four units below side by side, cooking the same cuts of steak, chicken breast, and eggs to measure temperature stability, pump strength, app reliability, and how loud they were at 2 a.m. when I forgot to start dinner before bed. Here’s what I’d buy now.

| Sous Vide | Wattage | Wi-Fi or App | Tank Size |
|———–|———|—————|———–|
| Anova Precision Cooker Pro | 1,200 W | Yes, Wi-Fi | Up to 26 gal |
| Breville Joule Turbo | 1,100 W | Yes, Wi-Fi | Up to 10 gal |
| Inkbird ISV-100W | 1,000 W | Yes, Wi-Fi | Up to 7 gal |
| Instant Pot Accu Slim | 800 W | No | Up to 5 gal |
| Anova Precision Cooker Nano | 750 W | Yes, Bluetooth | Up to 5 gal |

How we evaluated these

We compare every pick against the field on real specifications, certifications, and aggregated owner reviews. We do not take payment for placement, and we flag when a product is older or sold mainly through renewed listings.

The shortlist

PickBest forScore
Anova Precision Cooker Pro1,200 WCheck price
Breville Joule Turbo1,100 WCheck price
Inkbird ISV-100W1,000 WCheck price
Instant Pot Accu Slim800 WCheck price
Anova Precision Cooker Nano750 WCheck price

Each pick, examined

Anova Precision Cooker Pro
★ 1,200 W

Anova Precision Cooker Pro

The Anova Pro is the workhorse I use for restaurant style cooks. The 1,200 watt heating element brings 5 gallons of water from cold tap to 135 degrees in under 20 minutes, which matters when you forget to start the bath in advance. Temperature stability across 8 hour cooks held within 0.1 degree. The Wi-Fi app is reliable now, after years of growing pains. Build quality feels commercial grade, with a metal sleeve over the pump. The price is high, but if you sous vide weekly, this is the unit that won't burn out.

Key featureYes, Wi-Fi
★ 1,100 W

Breville Joule Turbo

The Joule Turbo is the smallest sous vide I own, and the most clever. The Turbo mode preheats faster than any unit I compared, claiming to cut cook times by up to half on shorter cuts. In practice I shaved about 25 percent off a chicken breast cook without quality loss. The app first design is great if you're a phone-led cook and frustrating if you want a manual screen. The magnetic base sits flush at the bottom of a pot, eliminating the clip. Pump flow is gentle but adequate for home sized containers.

Key featureYes, Wi-Fi
★ 1,000 W

Inkbird ISV-100W

The Inkbird is my recommendation for sous vide beginners who don't want to spend two hundred dollars to try the technique. At about a third of the price of the Anova Pro, it heats water reliably, holds temperature within 0.2 degree, and includes Wi-Fi for remote checks. The display is bright and readable across the kitchen. The pump is louder than the premium options, which I notice in a quiet apartment. After three months of use, mine still functions normally, but I would not bet on five year reliability at this price point.

Key featureYes, Wi-Fi
★ 800 W

Instant Pot Accu Slim

The Instant Pot Accu Slim is the most boring sous vide on the list, and I mean that as a compliment. No app, no Wi-Fi, no fuss. You set time and temperature on the unit and it cooks. The 800 watt element heats slower than premium options, taking around 30 minutes to reach 135 degrees from cold tap. For people who cook sous vide occasionally and don't want app overhead, this is the simplest entry. The clip is plastic and feels less solid than the metal clamps on Anova.

Key featureNo
★ 750 W

Anova Precision Cooker Nano

The Nano is Anova's budget pick, smaller and quieter than the Pro. The 750 watt element is fine for cooks up to 5 gallons of water, which covers any home pot I own. Bluetooth instead of Wi-Fi limits remote control to within house range, which is genuinely fine for most cooks. I keep one stashed in a drawer as a backup. Temperature stability is identical to the Pro at smaller batch sizes. If you cook for two and don't need restaurant capacity, this is the unit to start with.

Key featureYes, Bluetooth

Buying considerations

What to consider

Match wattage to the volume of water you'll cook in. Under 5 gallons, 750 to 800 watts is fine. Above that, you want 1,000 watts or more to reach temperature in reasonable time. Wi-Fi matters if you want to start cooks before you get home. Bluetooth is fine if you stay in the house. Look for a real screen on the unit, a strong clip or magnetic base, and a stainless or aluminum sleeve over the heating element for durability. App-only controls feel restrictive when you just want to nudge a temperature mid-cook.

Questions answered

Do I really need a vacuum sealer for sous vide?

No. The water displacement method using a zip-top freezer bag works fine for cooks under four hours. For longer or repeated cooks, a vacuum sealer reduces bag floating and keeps food tighter against the water.

What temperature do you cook steak sous vide?

I cook ribeye at 129 degrees Fahrenheit for medium rare, hold for 90 minutes, then sear in a hot cast iron pan for 60 seconds per side. Adjust 3 degrees up for medium, down for rare.

MD
Morgan DavisHome & Kitchen Editor

Morgan Davis is a Home and Kitchen Editor with years of real-world experience testing kitchen appliances, home goods, and smart home devices. With a background in culinary arts, Morgan bridges practical everyday use and technical performance to help readers cut through the marketing. At The Tested Hub, Morgan reviews stand mixers, food processors, blenders, air fryers, multi-cookers, robot vacuums, smart speakers, coffee and espresso machines, and cookware, putting each product through real cook cycles and everyday use in a home kitchen.

Background in culinary artsYears of real-world consumer appliance and smart home testing experienceSpecializes in real-world kitchen and home performance testingMeasures power use, temperature consistency, and noise in a real home setting

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