On this page

  1. How we tested it
  2. What we found
  3. Which one should you use
  4. FAQ

This is one of the most common questions we get, and it's usually asked the wrong way. Pour-over and drip machines aren't really competing on quality — they're solving different problems. We brewed the same beans, at the same ratio, on both, and had three people taste them blind to see what actually changes.

How we tested it

Same single-origin washed Colombian beans, ground fresh for each brew, same 1:16 ratio, same filtered water. One batch on a Hario V60, one batch on a mid-range drip machine with a flat-bottom basket. Three tasters scored each cup blind on clarity, body, sweetness, and overall preference.

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What we found

AttributePour-overDrip machine
Clarity / brightnessHigherLower
Body / mouthfeelLighterFuller
Consistency between batchesVaries with techniqueVery consistent
Hands-on time~4 minutes active~1 minute active

The gap was smaller than we expected. A well-calibrated drip machine with a flat-bottom basket and a decent grinder gets closer to pour-over quality than its reputation suggests — the biggest quality gap we've seen in past testing usually comes from an old or low-end machine, not the brew method itself.

Which one should you use

If mornings are rushed and you want the same result every time without thinking about it, a good drip machine is the right call. If you have five spare minutes and want to taste small changes in technique and ratio, pour-over rewards that attention in a way a machine can't.

Devon Cole

Devon founded The Grind Report and runs the blind-tasting panel for comparison guides. Read more on the about page.

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Frequently asked questions

Does pour-over coffee really taste better than drip machine coffee?

In our blind side-by-side tasting, pour-over scored higher for clarity and brightness, while drip scored higher for body and consistency day to day. Which is "better" depends on which of those you value more.

Is pour-over coffee stronger than drip coffee?

Not inherently — strength is mostly a function of your coffee-to-water ratio, not the brew method. A pour-over and a drip machine set to the same ratio produce similar strength.