Best Immersion Blenders for 2024
Once you start using one of the best immersion blenders, you'll be wondering why it took you so long to buy one.
What to consider
Accessories
Some stick blenders have whisk and food processor attachments to get more bang for the buck.
Corded vs. cordless
Corded blenders can be awkward, but you won't have to remember to charge between uses.
Price and budget
How cheap is too cheap when it comes to stick blenders?
Weight
Models range from 2 pounds to over 5. How much can your arm handle?
Our Picks
If you're after a great immersion blender on a budget, the $50 Cuisinart Smart Stick gives you plenty of power at a nice price. If you don't mind spending a bit more, spring for the ferocious Breville Control Grip immersion blender. I've been using immersion blenders for decades: In daily use and controlled tests, Breville's stick blender is the best hand blender I've locked my grip around, and it's well worth the $130 price tag to whip up soup, sauce or salad dressing in a flash.
There are dozens of immersion blenders to choose from. To find the best I hauled in nine models from popular brands such as Vitamix, Braun and Breville. These handy gadgets are perfect for pureeing, whipping and mixing nearly any food you can think of. Even better, they can double as food processors. For serious soup makers, you'd be hard-pressed to find a more useful kitchen tool than the immersion blender (though the Dutch oven makes a solid case).
After hours of blending, whipping and chopping and a gallon or two of leftover soup, I've decided on these three models as the best immersion blenders to buy in 2024.
Best immersion blenders for 2024
This was one of the pricier immersion blenders I tested but it gives a whole lot of bang for the buck. The Breville Control Grip is incredibly easy and intuitive to use and packs plenty of power, despite lower total wattage than some others on the list. It also has one of my favorite handles, which is both sturdy and comfortable. This hand blender weighs a manageable 3.8 pounds and has good balance. I also like the rubber protectors on the bottom of the blade guard, which prevent it from scratching a pot or Dutch oven.
For $129, you'll get the mighty Breville stick blender and four handy accessories: a wire whisk, food chopper bowl, large jug for mixing and an ice crusher attachment you can screw into the jug for making mixed drinks and smoothies. All of the attachments are made from extremely high-grade plastic and feel particularly durable. If you're looking for an immersion blender that can do far more than puree soups and sauces, this is the one to buy.
Best cordless immersion blender
KitchenAid Cordless Blender KHBBV53BM
If a corded immersion blender feels restrictive, KitchenAid's cordless hand blender is another excellent option. It has adjustable variable speeds and plenty of power to whip potatoes, blend veggies and emulsify pesto and salad dressings with ease.
The KitchenAid was one of the easiest to attach and operate with a comfortably placed safety switch on the backside of the handle. I also love the look and feel of this stick blender with its durable matte plastic build. It has great weight distribution and is a true pleasure to use. This basic cordless immersion blender with mixing cup can be had for $100. It will run you closer to $160 if you choose the bundle with a whisk, food chopper attachment and blending cup.
Worth noting that you can't use this model if it's uncharged, since it can only be plugged in while the blade is detached. It takes 20 minutes or so to achieve a full charge, which gives you two hours of use. In a pinch, you can certainly charge it for five or 10 minutes and still get enough battery life for most hand blender tasks.
Best value immersion blender
Cuisinart Smart Stick CSB-179P1
You can purchase this formidable hand blender along with a whisk, chopper and mixing cup in two different colors on a budget. Considering its excellent performance in the tests I ran, that makes it an easy pick for the best value immersion blender of the bunch. The Cuisinart sports 300 watts of power (even more than our top pick) and an easy speed control dial on top of the handle for precision blending and whipping.
If I had one complaint about this budget-friendly model, it's the placement of the safety button. It's located directly above the power button and it can be a bit awkward to hold both down at once. Compare that to the KitchenAid, which has its safety button on the back so you can use your natural grip to hold it down. For what it's worth, the Cuisinart's safety button is probably safer, since it's almost impossible to press by accident.
Other immersion blenders I tested
Vitamix Immersion Blender 067991: This excellent $150 hand blender is a bit too pricey to land on the top of our list. But for power users and those looking for an immersion blender with loads of pop, the Vitamix Immersion Blender packs a whopping 625 watts. It's comfortable in the hand and performed exceedingly well in all the tests I ran on it.
Braun MQ7025X: This powerful immersion blender passed every test with flying colors and nearly landed on this list. It also comes with useful attachments including a food chopper and whisk. What kept it from being a top pick was the weight. At over 5 pounds, it's the heaviest stick blender I tested and was hefty enough to cause real fatigue in my arm.
All-Clad KZ800D51: All-Clad is best known for its top-of-the-line cookware, including our favorite set for 2024. The brand also makes small kitchen appliances, and All-Clad's hand blender is as powerful as it gets. The sleek, cordless hand blender has a monster 220-volt battery and whipped the heck out of everything I put it in. But at $180 for the blender alone with no attachments, it's too pricey for us to recommend for the average home cook.
Beautiful Hand Blender: Of the cheap immersion blenders I tested, this $30 two-speed model performed the best, and it's a solid choice if you're seeking a true budget buy. While the all-plastic build wasn't my favorite, the blade attached securely and the device blended well, especially when compared to some of the other stick blenders under $40.
Homgeek Hand Blender H32275US (Update: Currently unavailable): I had high hopes for this inexpensive hand blender since it had a sturdier build than the Beautiful Hand Blender and variable speed control for precision work. But it underperformed when it came to basic functions such as pureeing cooked vegetables, leaving too many chunks for my liking after two minutes of work.
Bella Immersion Blender 14460: This budget hand blender felt cheap and flimsy when I held it and the blade attachment had some worrisome wiggle when mounted. It performed acceptably, but the soup I pureed was still markedly chunkier after two minutes than with most other models.
How we test immersion blenders
In testing to find the best immersion blender for 2024, I ran several tests on each model over the course of a week and took note of how well each performed. I also took into account other attributes like size, weight, sturdiness, how easy the blender was to clean and the various modes and number of speeds at which it ran.
Blending cooked vegetables for soup
Blending soups and sauces out of cooked vegetables and other ingredients is by far the most popular use for an immersion blender. I blended four cups of cooked vegetables and broth in a saucepan on the highest setting and recorded how well each one blended the ingredients after one minute, and again after an additional minute.
With the exception of the cheap blenders under $40, all of the models I tested had no trouble pureeing the veggies into soup within a few minutes, but some created a slightly smoother soup in less time. The best of them not only pureed the vegetables in two minutes but even began frothing the liquid toward the end of the allotted time. Some of the cheaper models required more than two minutes to get all the chunks pureed.
Making whipped cream
Not all the immersion blenders I tested offered attachments like a whisk or chopping bowl. For those with a whisk, I made a batch of this popular dessert topping using one-half a cup of whipping cream and noted how each batch looked after one minute of whipping and again after two. Here, I was looking for the blender to make dense-yet-fluffy whipped cream as quickly as possible.
Food chopper test
Several of the models in our test range also include a food-processor attachment. For those that did, I chopped one cup of carrots and celery, diced into roughly one-inch chunks. After 10 seconds of chopping, I photographed the resulting pile of chopped carrots and noted which delivered the smallest and most uniform results. Most of the stick blenders with food processor cups fared well in this test, including the $34 Beautiful Hand Blender, but some did the job a few seconds faster.
Touch and feel
This test is subjective, but I made sure to handle each immersion blender for several minutes noting the overall weight, balance and sturdiness. I did the same while I was using them in the various tests noting any irregularities or discomfort.
The more expensive models including the KitchenAid, Braun, Breville and Vitamix all felt well-balanced and solid, giving me confidence that they wouldn't break or become loose with regular use. The cheaper models didn't elicit quite the same confidence, and some felt as if one tumble off the counter to the kitchen floor might spell an early demise.
Immersion blender specs
Model | Power | Weight (pounds) | Accessories | Speeds | Cordless | Price |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
All-Clad Cordless Hand Blender KZ800D51 | 600W | 2.97 | none | 5 | Y | $230 |
Vitamix Immersion Blender 067991 | 625W | 2.83 | none | 5 | N | $150 |
Breville Control Grip BSB510XL | 280W | 3.8 | whisk, chopping cup, mixing cup | variable | N | $120 |
Braun MultiQuick MQ7025X | 500W | 5.41 | whisk, chopping cup, mixing cup | variable | N | $100 |
KitchenAid Cordless Hand Blender KHBBV53BM | 198W | 2.42 | mixing cup | 7 | Y | $90 |
Cuisinart Smart Stick CSB-179P1 | 300W | 3.3 | whisk, chopping cup, mixing cup | variable | N | $60 |
Beautiful Hand Blender | 400W | 2.5 | whisk, chopping cup, mixing cup | 2 | N | $34 |
Homgeek Hand Blender H32275US | 500W | 2 | whisk, chopping cup, mixing cup, frother | 6 | N | $29 |
Bella Immersion Blender 14460 | 250W | 2.83 | whisk | 2 | N | $30 |
Factors to consider when buying an immersion blender
Hand blender accessories
While additional attachments aren't necessary, to get the most out of your immersion blender, a few key extras are great to have. A whisk attachment will allow you to easily make whipped cream and meringue, while a food chopper will enable your hand blender to do the work of a food processor. One model I tested includes a milk frother, too, for crafting lattes and cappuccinos at home.
Power
You don't necessarily need the most powerful motor to blend cooked vegetables, canned tomatoes, herbs and other classic soup and sauce ingredients. The Breville Control Grip, for instance, has only 280 watts (less than half of the ultrapowerful All-Clad) but still managed to ace every test I gave it. That said, an immersion blender with fewer than 250 watts may struggle to give you smooth results or take longer to do a blending job.
Corded vs. cordless
There are both corded and cordless stick blenders. Corded typically have more power but you might knock over a bottle or two if with the wire you're not careful. Cordless models offer mobility but you'll need to remember to charge them in between uses. Cordless models also tend to lose power over time as the battery weakens.
Style and design
All immersion blenders feature steel blade attachments but the handle is typically what separates the great from the not-so-great. Those built with steel or high-grade plastic were the models I liked best. Some of the cheaper stick blenders I tested were constructed using cheap plastic in the handle and they, unsurprisingly, felt a bit chintzy and prone to breakage.
Weight and balance
Hand blenders run the gamut in weight from light-as-air models under 3 pounds up to bigger blenders that weigh more than 5. Somewhere in the 2.5- to 4-pound range felt most comfortable for me. A little bit of weight helps you control the blender from spinning away, but too much heft can make an immersion blender a chore to handle deftly or use for long periods.
Cost and value
Because this is a tool you might not use as regularly as others, factoring in price is important. Spending more than $120 will get you a super-premium hand blender that performs at the top of the class, but you likely don't need to spend that much to net great results. Go too cheap, and I found you lose out on hand blender performance as well as the quality of the build.