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Blender review

Vitamix 5200 Review

Vitamix 5200
The Vitamix 5200. Image: Vitamix.

The verdict

$449
Best for: daily smoothie, soup and nut-butter makers who want a blender that will outlast every other appliance in the kitchen
Our rating: ★★★★½ — the blender you buy once and keep for decades
The Vitamix 5200 is loud, plain and close to unkillable — a 2-horsepower workhorse with a 7-year warranty that blends smoother than anything with a touchscreen, and keeps doing it for twenty years.
Our review process

How we tested the Vitamix 5200

We ran the 5200 as our daily blender for two months — smoothies, hot soup, nut butter and frozen drinks — judging blend smoothness, the tamper, noise and how it cleans up.

  • Blended leafy-green smoothies daily and checked for grit
  • Made nut butter and frozen desserts using the tamper
  • Heated soup from cold on high to test the motor’s power
  • Self-cleaned after every use to confirm the soap-and-water method

The Vitamix 5200 is the least glamorous blender we recommend and the one we would still own in twenty years. There is no touchscreen, no presets and no Bluetooth — just a 2-horsepower motor, a tall 64-ounce jar, and a variable dial that turns whole vegetables, frozen fruit and nuts into something genuinely smooth. It is loud and it is tall enough to fight your cabinets, but it earns a permanent spot on the counter by simply never failing. For anyone who blends daily, the 5200 is the buy-it-for-life pick.

Specs at a glance
TypeHigh-performance countertop blender
Motor2.0 peak horsepower
Container64 oz (2.0 L) BPA-free, classic tall
Blades3-inch laser-cut aircraft-grade stainless
Controls10-speed variable dial + High/Variable switch (analog)
Self-cleanBlend warm water and soap 30–60 sec
Height20.5 in with container (check cabinet clearance)
Made inCleveland, Ohio, USA
Warranty7 years, full

What the Vitamix 5200 is

The 5200 is Vitamix’s classic high-performance blender — the analog machine the brand’s reputation was built on. A 2-peak-horsepower motor drives a tall 64-ounce container through laser-cut stainless blades, powerful enough to pulverize ice, fibrous greens and nuts into a smooth blend rather than a chunky one. There are no digital presets: you get a variable-speed dial and a High/Variable switch, and you control the blend by hand. It is deliberately simple, which is a large part of why it lasts.

Design and build quality

Build quality is the whole story here. The motor base is heavy and planted, the switches are mechanical and replaceable, and the container is a thick BPA-free jar designed to take years of daily abuse. There is nothing to crack, no touch panel to fail, no firmware to abandon. It looks utilitarian — a plain black or white base and a tall jar — but it is the kind of plain that still works when trendier blenders are in a landfill. The tall container is the one design caveat: at 20.5 inches assembled it will not fit under many upper cabinets.

Vitamix 5200
The Vitamix 5200 on the counter.

Setting it up

There is essentially no setup: seat the container, plug it in, and blend. Vitamix includes a tamper — a plunger you use through the lid to push thick mixtures into the blades without stopping the motor — which is the trick that lets the 5200 make nut butters and frozen desserts a weaker blender cannot. The printed guide and Vitamix’s recipes cover the basic speed-and-time combinations; within a week the dial becomes muscle memory.

Blending performance

This is where the price is justified. In our testing the 5200 blended leafy-green smoothies with no detectable grit, crushed ice to snow, and turned soaked cashews into silky cream — tasks that leave cheaper blenders with chunks and pulp. The variable dial matters more than it looks: you start low to draw ingredients down, then climb to high for the final smooth finish. Run long enough on high, the friction actually heats soup to steaming from cold — a genuinely useful party trick that shows how much power is on tap.

Everyday use and versatility

The 64-ounce jar handles family batches — smoothies for several, a full pot of soup, big batches of sauce or batter. Beyond smoothies it grinds grains to flour, makes nut butter, purees soup, crushes ice for frozen drinks and even kneads certain doughs. For a household that blends daily, the versatility means it replaces two or three lesser gadgets. The tamper is the key accessory for the thickest jobs; keep it to hand.

Vitamix 5200
The 64-oz container, loaded to blend.

Noise and the honest downsides

It is loud — there is no quiet way to move that much air and ice with 2 horsepower, and the 5200 does not pretend otherwise. It is also tall, so measure your cabinet clearance before buying; the shorter, wider containers on newer Vitamix models exist partly to solve this. And it is analog: if you want one-touch smoothie and soup programs that stop themselves, a preset model is the one to get. None of these are reliability problems — they are the trade-offs of a simple, powerful machine.

Cleaning and maintenance

Cleaning is the 5200’s best convenience: fill the jar halfway with warm water and a drop of dish soap, run it on high for 30 to 60 seconds, and it scrubs itself clean. There are no removable blades to disassemble and cut yourself on — the blade assembly stays put — and a rinse finishes the job. With no electronics to fail and mechanical parts Vitamix still services, maintenance over the years is close to nothing.

How it compares to the alternatives

Against Vitamix’s own newer Ascent and Explorian lines, the 5200 gives up digital timers, presets and shorter containers, but matches them on the thing that matters — blend quality — often for less money. Against a cheaper blender like a Ninja or a NutriBullet, it is not close on smoothness, durability or warranty, though those cost a fraction and suit lighter use. Against a Blendtec, the two trade blows; Vitamix’s tamper and variable dial give more hands-on control.

Vitamix 5200
Self-cleaning with soap and water.

Price, value and warranty

At around $449 the 5200 is a serious blender purchase, and the 7-year full warranty is what makes it a value rather than a splurge. Vitamix machines routinely run 10 to 20 years, and the company services them rather than replacing them, so the cost per year is tiny for a daily-use appliance. Refurbished units with a shorter warranty drop the entry price further and are a genuinely smart way in.

Who it is for, and who should skip it

Buy it if you blend daily and want the smoothest results and a machine that will outlive every other appliance you own — the analog simplicity is a feature, not a compromise. Skip it if you want one-touch presets and a quieter, shorter machine, where a newer Ascent model or a cheaper blender fits better, or if you only blend occasionally, where the 5200 is more machine than you need. For the daily blender, this is the buy-once answer.

Pros & cons

What we like

  • 2-horsepower motor blends genuinely smooth — no grit, no chunks
  • Close to unkillable, with a 7-year full warranty and real repairs
  • Self-cleans in under a minute with soap and water
  • Tamper unlocks nut butters and frozen desserts weaker blenders cannot make
  • 64-oz jar handles full family batches

Worth knowing

  • Loud — there is no quiet 2-HP blend
  • Tall container will not fit under many cabinets (20.5 in)
  • Analog controls only — no presets or timer
  • Premium price next to everyday blenders

Where to buy the Vitamix 5200

Check the current price and availability before you buy — it moves.

Check the price →

FAQ

Is the Vitamix 5200 worth the money?
For daily blending, yes. It blends smoother than cheaper machines and routinely lasts 10 to 20 years with a 7-year warranty, so the cost per year is small. Refurbished units lower the entry price. Check current pricing here.
What is the difference between the Vitamix 5200 and the newer Ascent models?
The Ascent line adds digital timers, presets, Bluetooth and shorter, wider containers. The 5200 is analog and taller but matches them on blend quality, often for less — the choice is presets versus simplicity.
Will the Vitamix 5200 fit under my kitchen cabinets?
Often not — it stands about 20.5 inches with the classic tall container. Measure your cabinet clearance first; if it is tight, a short-container Vitamix model is the better fit.
Can the Vitamix 5200 make hot soup?
Yes. Run it on high for several minutes and the friction from the blades heats the soup to steaming from cold ingredients — no stove required.
Is the Vitamix 5200 loud?
Yes. Moving that much power and ice makes noise, and the 5200 is louder than a budget blender. It is the trade-off for the blend quality and durability.
How do you clean a Vitamix 5200?
Fill the container halfway with warm water and a drop of dish soap, run on high for 30 to 60 seconds, then rinse. The blades stay in place, so there is nothing to disassemble.
TF

The Finer Home reviews team

The Finer Home is an independent review team. We buy the products we cover with our own money, live with them in real homes for weeks, and judge them on how they actually hold up — not on spec sheets or press releases. No brand pays for a review or sees it before it runs.

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