Apartment-Tested Review · 2026
Flair Espresso Flair 58
58mm prosumer manual lever with electric preheat — closest to 'the real' professional E61 group in manual format. Pricier Cafelat Robot ($464 vs $400), but preheat saves the boiling-kettle time.



📊 What this review is built on
Quick verdict
58mm prosumer manual lever with electric preheat — closest to 'the real' professional E61 group in manual format. Pricier Cafelat Robot ($464 vs $400), but preheat saves the boiling-kettle time.
Specs
| Footprint (W × D × H) | —″ × —″ × —″ · — × — × — mm |
|---|---|
| Weight | 12.0 lb · 5.4 kg |
| Power | preheat heater only ~150W W |
| Water tank | — L · — oz |
| Portafilter | 58 mm |
| Heating | electric preheat (cylinder warm-up only) + external water boil |
| PID temp control | No |
| Pre-infusion | No |
| Auto-milk frother | No |
| Warranty | 2 years |
| MSRP | $580.00 |
Apartment-Fit Score
- Footprint8/10
- Plumbing-free10/10
- Renter-safe10/10
- Noise (lower better)~35 dB
Methodology: how we score this →
What expert reviewers say
all right this is the flare 58 plus 2 and this machine is probably one of the best espresso cheat codes that I found let me tell you why most espresso machines that you would see in a store or online or whatever they're very complicated mechanically they're powered by pumps th…
And I would love to hear from those of you who own this down in the comments below, whether you have found thisgood or bad, frustrating, or really not a problem at all.
The question ultimately, is,is it good value for money and would I recommend you buy it?
What Reddit really says
800 for a piston with no boiler or thermal stability. Like what a joke.
I think the hype revolves around it being a very good platform for full control over temp, flow and pressure profiling at quite a low price. It is limited on speed and brew water capacity. But from what I hear, if you are willing to put the effort in you can pretty much match any machine in terms of shot quality.
For what you get, it's incredibly cheap and robust (as is the Cafelat Robot). Additionally, even compared to a flow controlled machine with PID, imo, you can consistently produce better espresso with a manual machine. This is because you have live ability to adapt to the resistance you feel. If you want to do a 2 bar pre-infusion, but drips start coming out before 2 bar, you now know that you ca…
It has 2 limitations. 1. You can't control temperature as granularly as with PIDed boiler machines 2. You can't froth milk with it. Other than that I don't understand why you think it has more limitations than the average electrical machine that can't even pressure profile or preinfuse.
> Is the espresso that much better than a flow controlled pump driven machine with PID? It might not be better, but it will be as good at a fraction of the price. And it will last forever with minimal maintenance.
The Robot is a “Buy it for Life” grade machine IMO. Fewer parts than the Flair, delicious espresso, easy to use and super high quality with great fit and finish. The only disadvantages (and I use the term lightly) is it has a few custom parts (basket, portafilter, tamper) unlike the Flair 58 which is more standardised and is also less suited to light roasts than something like the 58+. Given yo…
Video review
Pros & cons
✓ Strengths
- 58mm professional portafilter — universal accessory ecosystem
- 100% stainless steel brew path (no plastic)
- Pressure gauge integrated — teaches profiling
- Electric preheat 3 settings (85/90/95°C) — temp consistency
- Silent during extraction
- 12 bar max pressure — enough for all profiles
- James Hoffmann spoke warmly — community trust
- 2-year warranty
✗ Weaknesses
- NO milk steamer ever — you'll need a separate milk frother $100+
- Manual workflow steeper learning curve than the Cafelat Robot
- Lever up height 616mm — doesn't fit under the kitchen cabinet
- Preheat longer warm-up than electric competitors (~5-7 min)
- Hoffmann note: 'frustratingly close to outstanding' — exists quirks workflow
- Plus 2 version at $585 — apex price point
Buy if / Skip if
Buy if
- Who wants 58mm prosumer ecosystem without $1500 on espresso machine
- Silent alternative for apartments with thin walls
- Tinkerer who wants to learn pressure profiling on their own
- Black coffee primary — milk steamer not needed
- Renter with minimal kitchen committment
Skip if
- Latte/cappuccino daily (no milk steamer)
- You want 1-button espresso
- Tight budget — Cafelat Robot at $400 delivers 90% experience
- Kitchen cabinet low — lever-up won't fit
Prices verified 2026-05-03. Live snapshots may differ — click through to see current.
More angles






Frequently asked · apartment edition
Is the Flair Espresso Flair 58 loud enough to wake my partner?
Estimated ~35 dB during the pump cycle — manageable for early-morning use even with a sleeping partner nearby. Vibratory pumps cycle for ~10–25 sec per shot, then go quiet. The grinder is usually louder than the brew cycle.
Does it need plumbing?
No. The Flair Espresso Flair 58 runs entirely off its own water tank — no water line, no drain. Standard for renter-friendly machines.
Will it run on a standard US 110V outlet?
Yes — native 120V (US). Plug into any standard outlet. No 220V dedicated circuit needed.
Who should skip the Flair Espresso Flair 58?
- Latte/cappuccino daily (no milk steamer)
- You want 1-button espresso
- Tight budget — Cafelat Robot at $400 delivers 90% experience
- Kitchen cabinet low — lever-up won't fit
How long is the warranty?
2 years from Flair Espresso on the machine. Amazon adds 30-day returns on top. Most failures Reddit users report happen after the warranty — specifically the steam-wand and pump cycle.
Who is the Flair Espresso Flair 58 best for?
- Who wants 58mm prosumer ecosystem without $1500 on espresso machine
- Silent alternative for apartments with thin walls
- Tinkerer who wants to learn pressure profiling on their own
- Black coffee primary — milk steamer not needed