If you like the idea of café-style coffee but don’t want a big, complicated machine, capsule makers like Nespresso Inissia and Essenza Mini EN85 are the “press one button, get caffeine” option. Both use the same Nespresso Original capsules and a 19-bar pump, so on paper they promise the same hot, stable shot every morning. What actually matters in a small apartment or shared kitchen is simpler: how fast you get from sleepy to first sip, how often you’re topping up the water or emptying capsules, how much counter space disappears, and whether the noise will wake whoever’s still asleep. For home offices, studio flats or busy households, those everyday details end up being more important than any “barista-style” slogan.
Nespresso CitiZ Coffee Machine
HIGH-PERFORMANCE: 19-bar high-pressure pump and fast heat-up system (in only a few seconds); easy insertion, automatic piercing and brewing of coffee capsules.COMPACT SIZE: Award-winning compact design and intuitive, user-friendly functionalities.
Seen through that lens, the two machines behave quite differently in daily use. Nespresso Inissia feels like a small but serious “main coffee maker”: it heats up in about 25 seconds, so the time from button press to first sip is basically “brush your teeth and it’s ready”; the roughly 0.7 L water tank and larger capsule bin mean two or three people can get their morning coffees without stopping mid-rush to refill or empty anything. The noise is typical capsule-machine pump noise—short and noticeable, but not the kind of roar that wakes the whole place. Physically it’s still compact, yet clearly designed to live on the kitchen counter full-time and cover most of the household’s coffee. Essenza Mini EN85 keeps the same Original capsule system and 19-bar pump but shrinks everything around it: the body is only about 11 cm wide, the tank is around 0.6 L, and the capsule container holds roughly six used capsules. That makes a big difference if your counter is already crowded—you can tuck it next to the kettle, on a narrow shelf or at the edge of a desk and pick it up with one hand when you want to move it. The trade-off is straightforward: if several people drink every day or you like back-to-back shots, you’ll be adding water and emptying capsules more often than with Inissia; the noise profile is similar—short bursts while it brews—but in both cases it’s more “you notice it” than “everyone complains about it”.
NESCAFÉ Dolce Gusto Genio S Automatic(EDG226.A)
COMPACT COFFEE MAKER: The machine features a sleek, compact design (11.2cm W x 27.3cm H x 28.8cm D) with a 0.8L water tank, making it a perfect fit for any kitchen.
Quick spec snapshot
Everyday angle | Nespresso Inissia | Nespresso Essenza Mini EN85 |
|---|---|---|
First cup speed | Heats in ~25 seconds; feels like “press button, brush teeth, coffee’s ready” | Similarly fast heat-up; fine for a quick first espresso in the morning |
Water tank & refill frequency | ~0.7 L tank, usually enough for 2–3 morning coffees without refilling | ~0.6 L tank; better for one person, refills more often if several people drink |
Capsule bin & emptying frequency | Larger used-capsule container; needs emptying less often | Bin holds ~6 capsules; needs emptying more regularly |
Footprint in a cramped kitchen | Compact, but feels like a “main machine” that lives on the counter | Very slim (about 11 cm wide), easy to tuck beside a kettle or on a shelf |
Noise at breakfast | Short, typical capsule-machine pump noise; noticeable but unlikely to wake everyone | Similar short pump bursts; more “you hear it yourself” than “whole house hears it” |
After using both for a while, we stopped asking “which one makes better coffee” and started asking “which one fits this kitchen and this routine”. Inissia suits homes where coffee is a shared ritual: at least two people drink every day, mornings are busy, and you want one small machine that quietly carries that load with minimal refills or capsule emptying. Essenza Mini is ideal when space is the real problem and the coffee load is lighter—a studio flat, a couple where only one person drinks, or a home office corner where you just want one or two reliable shots a day. Price-wise, they generally sit in a similar bracket; Essenza Mini can sometimes come in slightly lower for certain colours or bundles, but actual prices move with promotions and are best judged from the current product pages. In the end, the choice is simple: if you need a compact machine that can still act as the main coffee maker for more than one person, go for Inissia; if you mostly drink alone and every centimetre of counter space counts, Essenza Mini will probably feel like the better roommate.