
We used the ENA 8 as a one-touch daily machine for six weeks, working through the drinks menu, testing the milk frother, and living with the small hopper and tank plus the automated cleaning cycles.
Not everyone wants to dial in a shot before coffee. The Jura ENA 8 is built for them: drop in beans, add water, and press one of fifteen drinks on the touchscreen — espresso, cappuccino, flat white — and it grinds, brews and froths in one go. What sets it apart from other super-automatics is size: at under 11 inches wide it fits where most bean-to-cup machines will not. It trades the control of a manual machine for genuine, repeatable convenience.
| Type | Super-automatic (bean-to-cup) |
| Beverages | 15 one-touch, touchscreen |
| Grinder | Professional Aroma Grinder |
| Milk | Fine-foam frother, one-touch cappuccino & latte |
| Footprint | 10.7 in wide × 12.7 in tall — very compact |
| Bean hopper | 4.4 oz |
| Water tank | 37 oz |
| Extras | Dual-cup function, auto rinse & clean cycles |
| Warranty | 2–3 years (varies by seller) |
The ENA 8 is a super-automatic, or bean-to-cup, espresso machine: it grinds fresh beans, tamps, brews and froths milk automatically, delivering a finished drink at one touch. A colour touchscreen offers fifteen one-touch specialties — espresso, coffee, cappuccino, cortado, latte macchiato, flat white and more. It is Jura’s compact model, aimed at people who want cafe-style variety without any of the manual steps, in a machine small enough for a modest kitchen.
The ENA 8 is striking for how small it is — 10.7 inches wide and 12.7 tall — yet it feels solid, with a clean fascia and a bright, responsive touchscreen. The single water tank sits at the side to keep the footprint narrow, and the bean hopper is aroma-sealed. Fit and finish are Swiss-tidy. The compact size is the design story: it brings full super-automatic capability to counters that cannot host a bulky bean-to-cup machine.
Setup is nearly nothing: fill the bean hopper, fill the water tank, run an initial rinse, and choose a drink. There is no grind-size dialling in the way a manual machine demands — a stepped grinder setting is the only adjustment — and the touchscreen walks you through first use. Within minutes you are pressing a button for a cappuccino. For a household that wants coffee without a learning curve, this is the entire appeal.
The Professional Aroma Grinder mills fresh beans for each drink, which Jura tunes for an even grind and fuller aroma. In our testing the espresso pulled with a respectable crema and consistent strength across the menu, and the dual-cup function brewed two black coffees at once. You can adjust strength, volume and temperature per drink and save favourites. It will not match a well-dialled manual shot for ultimate quality, but the consistency drink-to-drink is excellent.
Milk is where super-automatics live or die, and the ENA 8’s fine-foam frother is a genuine strength. One touch draws milk from a carton or jug through the spout and produces light, even foam for cappuccinos and lattes with no wand technique required. In our testing the foam was consistent and the transition from espresso to milk seamless. It is not latte-art microfoam, but for everyday cappuccinos and flat whites it is reliably good.
Super-automatics must stay clean to stay hygienic, and the ENA 8 automates most of it: it rinses the system at power-on and shut-down, prompts guided descaling and cleaning cycles, and the milk path flushes automatically. You empty the grounds container and drip tray regularly and run cleaning tablets when prompted. It is lower-effort than a manual machine day to day, but the milk system in particular needs the prompted cleaning to stay fresh.
The ENA 8 rewards the person who wants coffee to be easy. Press, wait, drink; the machine handles grinding, brewing and frothing. The compact footprint means it lives happily on a small counter, and the 4.4-ounce hopper and 37-ounce tank suit one- or two-person households — heavy users will refill more often. There is little to fiddle with, which is exactly the point: it removes the ritual so the coffee just appears.
Against a manual machine like the Breville Dual Boiler, the ENA 8 trades control and ultimate shot quality for one-touch convenience and zero technique. Against larger super-automatics with dual hoppers or bigger tanks, it gives up capacity for a much smaller footprint. Against pod machines, it uses fresh whole beans for far better coffee at a higher price. Its niche is clear: the most compact way to get genuine bean-to-cup variety.
At around $1,899 the ENA 8 is priced as a premium convenience machine, and the value depends on what you want. If one-touch variety, fresh-ground beans and a tiny footprint solve your problem, it earns its keep every morning. If you want the best possible espresso and enjoy the process, a manual machine at the same price gives more. Warranty runs two to three years depending on the seller, and Jura’s build is known to last with proper cleaning.
Buy it if you want cafe drinks at one touch, have limited counter space, and value convenience over control. Skip it if you want to dial in and pull your own shots — a manual machine is the better fit — or if you have a busy, high-volume household where the small hopper and tank become a chore. For the convenience-first coffee drinker with a small kitchen, it is the standout choice.
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