Hospitality

Choosing a commercial espresso machine: 5 mistakes to avoid

Written by Università del Caffè UK | 15 May 2026

Choosing the right commercial espresso machine is one of the most important decisions for any Hospitality business. Whether you run a hotel, restaurant, café or restaurant, coffee quality has become a key part of the guest experience—and increasingly, a factor that influences loyalty, spend and brand reputation.

In the UK, the coffee shop market reached £9.9bn with more than 20,400 outlets in 2023, proving that coffee culture continues to shape customer expectations across hospitality, not just in specialist cafés . At the same time, consumers are demanding more from venues: 23% say they expect more from hospitality venues than they did 12 months ago, while price, quality of food and customer service remain the top decision factors.

This means your commercial espresso machine is no longer just equipment—it is a strategic investment and when chosen right, can also support building a good reputation.

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Why your commercial espresso machine matters

A poor coffee experience can damage even the best hospitality concept.

Coffee is often the final touch of a meal, the centrepiece of breakfast service, or a reason for customers to extend their stay with dessert or after-dinner drinks. In casual dining, 53% of diners say high-quality coffee would significantly improve their overall dining experience, and 20% say it would help keep them loyal. At the same time, 33% are not fully satisfied with the coffee quality they receive in restaurants.

This is why selecting the right commercial coffee machine matters: it affects consistency, speed of service, staff efficiency, and ultimately guest satisfaction.

Commercial espresso machine: 5 mistakes to avoid

Choosing a commercial espresso machine should never be based on price alone. Here are the five most common mistakes operators make—and how to avoid them.

1. Choosing based only on purchase price

One of the biggest mistakes is focusing only on the upfront cost of the machine.

A cheaper professional coffee machine may seem like a smart financial decision, but if it leads to inconsistent coffee quality, higher maintenance costs, slower service, or dissatisfied customers, the long-term cost is far greater.

Consumers are not necessarily looking for the cheapest experience—they are looking for value. Research shows guests are willing to pay more when they perceive better quality and stronger overall experiences.

A reliable machine that delivers excellent espresso consistently can support higher spend per visit and stronger repeat business.

The real question is not “How much does the machine cost?” but “How much revenue does better coffee help generate?

2. Ignoring your daily volume and service peaks

Not every venue needs the same machine.

A boutique hotel breakfast room, a busy brunch restaurant and a high-volume casual dining chain all require very different performance levels. Choosing a machine without understanding your peak coffee demand often leads to operational issues.

If the machine is too small, service slows down during breakfast rushes or after-lunch peaks. If it is too large, you may be overinvesting in unnecessary capacity.

World Coffee Portal highlights that high-quality beverages and personalised service are key drivers of customer retention in hospitality. Speed and consistency are part of that quality perception.

Before investing, operators should evaluate:

  • cups served per day
  • peak demand windows
  • milk-based drink volume
  • staff skill levels
  • available counter space

The right capacity protects both workflow and customer satisfaction.

3. Underestimating milk-based drink demand

Espresso alone is not enough.

Latte and cappuccino continue to dominate consumer preferences, with latte representing 36% of hot coffee choices and cappuccino 22%, ahead of americano at 18%.

Many operators choose a machine based only on espresso performance, without considering milk systems. This creates bottlenecks, especially during breakfast service and lunch periods.

A strong steam system, reliable milk texturing and the ability to maintain quality during high-volume service are essential.

As iced and cold coffee consumption also continues to grow—driven by treat-led and experiential purchases—flexibility becomes even more important.

Your machine should support the full menu, not just the espresso shot.

4. Overlooking staff training and ease of use

Even the best machine will fail if the team cannot use it properly.

High staff turnover remains a challenge across hospitality, which makes ease of use critical. Complex equipment without proper onboarding can result in inconsistent drinks, waste and poor service speed.

Consumers notice these details. Beverage quality and personalised service are among the strongest drivers of loyalty in coffee-led environments.

Operators should prioritise machines that offer:

Technology should simplify service, not create friction.

5. Forgetting the impact on brand perception

Coffee quality influences how customers judge your entire venue and status. In hospitality, reputation is built across every touchpoint. Research shows that 46% of consumers check menus online before deciding where to visit, and reviews play a major role in venue choice.

A disappointing coffee served at the end of an otherwise excellent meal can negatively affect the final memory of the experience.

This is especially important in premium environments, where expectations are shaped by coffee shop culture. Guests increasingly compare restaurant and hotel coffee against specialist café standards.

The machine you choose directly affects that perception.

It is not just about making coffee—it is about protecting your brand.

As many operators say: there is nothing worse than a bad coffee after a perfect lunch.

How the right machine improves profitability

A high-performing commercial espresso machine helps operators in four key ways:

  • increases average ticket spend through dessert and coffee pairings
  • improves customer loyalty through better final impressions
  • supports premium pricing through perceived quality
  • creates differentiation in a competitive market

With coffee increasingly seen as an affordable luxury and a “treat” occasion, customers are more willing to trade up for quality rather than simply seek the lowest price.

For operators, that creates a real opportunity.

Why illy can support your coffee strategy

Choosing the right coffee machine suppliers is just as important as choosing the right machine.

illy combines nearly 80 years of expertise with a focus on consistency, premium quality and sustainable sourcing. Our coffee is made using only the top 1% of the best Arabica beans, supported by certified transparency and regenerative agriculture practices.

For Hospitality operators, this means access to:

  • high-performance professional espresso machines
  • technical support and servicing
  • staff training
  • premium presentation and glassware
  • a recognised premium coffee brand that customers trust

In fact, 50% of diners say they would be more inclined to order coffee if the venue serves a quality coffee brand.

If you are reviewing your current coffee offer, this is the right time to rethink your setup.

Discover how illy can help you elevate your coffee experience with the right commercial espresso machine—and request a free trial for your business.

Sources
  • World Coffee Portal, Project Café UK 2024 Summary (March 2024) – UK coffee shop market value, outlet growth, customer retention drivers and premium coffee trends.
  • CGA by NielsenIQ, Optimising Brand Reputation in Hospitality (March 2023) – consumer expectations, decision-making factors, menu research behaviour and the importance of reviews in hospitality.
  • Lumina Intelligence, The Evolving Coffee Landscape: A Deep Dive Into Consumer Trends (April 2023) – coffee consumption patterns, hot coffee preferences and social coffee occasions.
  • Lumina Intelligence, How Consumer Trends Are Shaping the Future of Coffee Menus (April 2024) – treat-led coffee purchases, premiumisation, iced coffee growth and experiential consumption trends.
  • illy UK, Casual Dining Research + OnePulse Survey (January 2025) – diner expectations around coffee quality, loyalty drivers and the importance of recognised premium coffee brands.
  • illy UK, Casual Dining Deck – strategic role of coffee in restaurants, guest satisfaction, differentiation and revenue opportunities.
  • UK Coffee Market Trends + Kantar Analysis – sustainability, premiumisation, menu development and evolving UK coffee consumption trends.