Cuisinart MisterChef PRO Electric Kitchen Food Stand Mixer
A stand mixer (5.5L, 1600 watts), a solid choice for everyday baking and the occasional bread dough.
You do not need to spend a fortune to start baking with a stand mixer. This guide covers what a budget stand mixer under £100 can realistically do, what to look for, and which affordable models we rate.
A good budget mixer under £100 will cream butter and sugar, whip cream and egg whites, and mix cake batters and biscuit doughs very well - you mainly give up heavy bread power, premium build and attachment ecosystems. Prioritise the three standard tools, a usable bowl size (4 to 5 litres) and reasonable stability, and keep expectations modest on stiff bread doughs.
At this price you are looking at capable everyday mixers with a more modest motor, more plastic in the build, and the standard beater, whisk and dough hook. They handle the bulk of home baking - cakes, biscuits, meringues, light doughs - happily. They are less suited to frequent heavy bread, where the motor and build feel the strain, but for most baking they are genuinely good value.
It is fine to accept a more modest motor, more plastic and fewer attachments at this price. Do not compromise on the standard tools or a usable bowl size, since those are what make a stand mixer useful. A very cheap mixer that lacks a dough hook or has a tiny bowl is a false economy for a baker.
Budget mixers suit occasional and new bakers, students and anyone making cakes and light bakes rather than daily bread. They are also a sensible way to find out how much you will use a mixer before upgrading. If you bake heavy bread regularly or want a lifetime appliance with attachments, spending more pays off.
A stand mixer (5.5L, 1600 watts), a solid choice for everyday baking and the occasional bread dough.
A stand mixer (3.5L, 800 watts), a solid choice for everyday baking and the occasional bread dough.
A stand mixer (4.5L, 450 watts), a solid choice for everyday baking and the occasional bread dough.
A stand mixer (3.5L, 650 watts), a solid choice for everyday baking and the occasional bread dough.
A stand mixer (4.5L, 1500 watts, tilt-head), a solid choice for everyday baking and the occasional bread dough.
A stand mixer (6L, 1300 watts), a solid choice for everyday baking and the occasional bread dough.
A stand mixer (4.5L, 1000 watts, tilt-head), a solid choice for everyday baking and the occasional bread dough.
A stand mixer (5.5L, 1500 watts, tilt-head), a solid choice for everyday baking and the occasional bread dough.
A stand mixer (5L, 1500 watts, tilt-head), a solid choice for everyday baking and the occasional bread dough.
A well-chosen mixer under £100 handles cakes, biscuits, whipping and light doughs very well. You give up heavy bread power, premium build and attachments, but the core baking jobs are done nicely.
Capable mixers start under £100 for cakes and light baking. Spending more buys sturdier build, more power for bread, larger bowls and attachment systems, which matter most if you bake bread often or want a lifetime appliance.
It can handle occasional, modest loaves, but regular or large stiff doughs strain a budget motor and build. For frequent bread, step up to a more powerful, sturdier mixer.
Our top pick is the Cuisinart MisterChef PRO Electric Kitchen Food Stand Mixer (our score 9.1/10) - A stand mixer (5.5L, 1600 watts), a solid choice for everyday baking and the occasional bread dough..