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Ninja Luxe Café Pro: Elevate your Barista Skills with our Review
Ninja Luxe Café Pro Review: A Comprehensive Look at the Top-of-the-Range Coffee Machine
At a glance
Expert’s Rating
Pros
- Stylish & compact
- Wide range of drinks
- Excellent screen and buttons
- Very good performance
Cons
- Some design niggles
- Barista Assist can overcompensate
- Expensive
Our Verdict
Ninja’s Pro level semi-automatic coffee machine can do just about everything and the vast majority of the time, it does it to an excellent level, doing things for you while still giving you enough control to feel like a barista. There are some niggles and you might find the cheaper Premier model plenty, but that doesn’t stop this from coming highly recommended.
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You might know Ninja for its air fryers but the company that’s taking the kitchen by storm makes everything from knives to ice cream makers to coffee machines.
It’s the latter that I’ve been testing with the Ninja Luxe Café Pro (ES701), aiming to bring the barista out in you. As the name suggests, this is the top-of-the-range model from Ninja, offering 10 more drinks than the Luxe Café Premier.
This semi-automatic machine is a ‘3-in-1′ with options for espresso, filter coffee, and cold brew. Furthermore, it has a hands-free Dual Froth System and a grinder which offers ‘Barista Assist Technology’.
I’ve been testing the Luxe Café Pro for two months to see if it’s worth splashing out on – at an RRP of £699/$749.
Design & Build
- Stylish and compact
- No touchscreen is a blessing
- Some awkward elements
The Ninja Luxe Café Pro is a really nice-looking coffee machine. I’d like more colorways to choose from like the Premier, but it’s smart and is surprisingly compact considering all the things it can do.

Chris Martin / Foundry
There were far too many labels and bits of tape to peel off after taking it out of the box, but luckily that was a one-time affair. More importantly, the Luxe Café Pro doesn’t feature a touchscreen. Every time I’ve used these on a coffee machine, they are slow and just downright unnecessary.
The combination of buttons, dials, and the backlit screen is perfect and shouldn’t go wrong either. Elsewhere, there’s a large bean hopper that can fit a little more than a typical bag’s worth (227g), a mug holder with space for four espresso mugs, and a handle on the side for tamping the ground beans.
Overall, it’s an excellent machine, but there are a few small downsides to note.

Chris Martin / Foundry
As with most coffee machines, the water tank is the most awkward. Unless you have a big kitchen with plenty of space around the machine, it’s tricky to get in and out – I normally just fill it with a jug instead (and you can use the milk jug).
The drip tray has a small removable section where the coffee pours in case you need to place a very tall travel mug, and this almost always falls out when I’m emptying the larger tray as I forget it’s there.
Another downside if you are forgetful is that the handle doesn’t get locked in place when the beans are being ground. If you walk off, come back and forget to tamp, pulling it out causes coffee to go everywhere, including in the drip tray.

Chris Martin / Foundry
The wheel to adjust the grind size is on the left side behind the tamp arm and could be awkward to use for some kitchens or perhaps people with conditions like arthritis. You do get some motorized assistance but not always.
There are two lights to help you see what you’re doing but they’re placed quite far back so I only found the one shining into the milk jug worked, and that’s the one I needed far less.
Lastly, the additional shelf to get smaller mugs closer to where the coffee brews doesn’t sit totally flat, so mugs can slide a little when the machine vibrates.
As mentioned, these are small things but worth noting before you buy.
Drinks, Features & Performance
- So. Many. Drinks
- Barista Assist is a help and a hindrance
- Top-notch froth
As mentioned at the top, the Luxe Café Pro can make a lot of coffee – I mean different types, so if you only ever make espresso, then this will be overkill. Just get a pod or simple bean-to-cup machine.
The coffee is split into two sections – espresso and coffee – and you can put three different baskets into the handle: single espresso, double espresso, and one called ‘luxe’.

Chris Martin / Foundry
The latter is just a fancy name for a large basket to make filter coffee but you can choose more than one option for a lot of the coffees, so you can experiment with different ways to make them. Here’s the full list:
Espresso
- Ristretto
- Espresso
- Lungo
- Americano
- Cold-pressed
Coffee
- Coffee
- Rich
- Over ice
- Cold brew
If that wasn’t enough choice, you can choose seven different sizes (where it applies) from small to XL (175-530ml) as well as three strength settings. And you can adjust the temperature if you wish.
It gives you so many choices, making the Luxe Cafe Pro far more versatile than so many rivals. Especially the fact it can make cold brew and cold-press coffee – you can use the latter to make espresso martinis.
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