Best Food Processors 2026: Top 5 Picks for Every Kitchen
The 5 best food processors for 2026
A food processor is the unsung hero of the kitchen — it slices, dices, chops, shreds, purees and kneads dough in seconds. We compared 12 current models and recommend five, from a professional 16-cup workhorse to a compact budget pick, each the best choice for a different kind of cook.
The quick verdict
Cuisinart DFP-14BCWN 14-Cup
A 720-watt motor and 14-cup bowl handle everything from herbs to dough — the most trusted processor in America.
Hamilton Beach 10-Cup
Capable everyday chopping and slicing at a price anyone can afford — the lowest in the lineup.
Breville BFP800XL Sous Chef 16-Cup
A 1000-watt motor and eight accessories make this essentially a commercial processor for the home.
Compare all 5 at a glance
| Model | Capacity | Motor | Best for | Price | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cuisinart DFP-14BCWNWinner | 14 cups | 720 W | Overall | $$ | Check price |
| Hamilton Beach 10-Cup | 10 cups | 450 W | Budget | $ | Check price |
| Breville Sous Chef 16-Cup | 16 cups | 1000 W | Premium | $$$ | Check price |
| KitchenAid 13-Cup | 13 cups | 650 W | Design | $$ | Check price |
| Ninja BN601 Professional Plus | 9 cups | 1000 W | Power | $$ | Check price |
The 5 best food processors
1. Cuisinart DFP-14BCWN 14-Cup Food Processor
Why we picked it: the 720-watt motor handles delicate herb chopping and tough dough kneading with equal ease, and the 14-cup BPA-free bowl is sized perfectly for families and meal prep. The extra-large feed tube swallows whole tomatoes and potatoes, and the adjustable slicing disc dials in thickness from 1mm to 8mm. It’s the one processor that does everything well without costing a fortune.
Pros
- 720W motor powers through tough ingredients
- 14-cup capacity is ideal for families
- Extra-large feed tube fits whole produce
- Adjustable slicing disc (1mm–8mm)
Cons
- Can be loud during heavy processing
- No mini-bowl included
2. Hamilton Beach 10-Cup Food Processor
Why we picked it: it proves you don’t need to spend hundreds to get a capable processor. The 450-watt motor and 10-cup bowl handle everyday chopping, slicing and shredding reliably — it just does it in smaller batches and with slightly less power than premium options. For budget-conscious cooks and occasional use, it’s the logical, low-risk choice.
Pros
- Lowest price in the lineup
- Simple, intuitive operation
- Compact footprint
- Dishwasher-safe parts
Cons
- 450W struggles with very hard ingredients
- Fewer blade options than premium models
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3. Breville BFP800XL Sous Chef 16-Cup
Why we picked it: this is the processor for people who want the absolute best. A 1000-watt motor — the most powerful in its class — drives eight disc and blade accessories that cover every cutting style, and the included 2.5-cup mini bowl handles small tasks. The julienne and French fry discs open up preparation possibilities cheaper models simply can’t match.
Pros
- 1000W motor, most powerful in class
- 8 accessories cover every cutting style
- Included 2.5-cup mini bowl
- SealLock system prevents leaks
Cons
- Premium price
- Large footprint, heavy at 19 lbs
4. KitchenAid 13-Cup Food Processor
Why we picked it: it brings KitchenAid’s signature design and build quality to the category, with a die-cast metal base that feels genuinely premium. The ExactSlice system adjusts slice thickness externally without opening the lid — a feature that’s genuinely useful and saves time and mess. If you already own KitchenAid appliances or value design as much as function, it delivers both.
Pros
- Die-cast metal base, premium feel
- ExactSlice adjusts thickness externally
- Included 3-cup mini bowl
- Available in multiple colors
Cons
- Higher price for the capacity
- Smaller feed tube than some rivals
5. Ninja BN601 Professional Plus Food Processor
Why we picked it: it’s perfect for cooks who want raw power at a reasonable price. The 1000-watt motor tears through even the toughest ingredients, and Ninja’s Auto-iQ technology adds pre-programmed pulse-and-pause patterns that take the guesswork out of common tasks like chopping and pureeing. A compact 9-cup design saves counter space.
Pros
- 1000W motor, most powerful in its price range
- Auto-iQ presets automate common tasks
- 4 versatile blades included
- Compact, counter-friendly design
Cons
- 9-cup bowl is smaller than competitors
- Narrower feed tube than premium models
Food processor buying guide
Bowl size. A 7–9-cup bowl suits 1–2 people or occasional use, handling sauces, dips and small batches. The 11–14-cup range is the sweet spot for most families, taking full recipes, meal-prep batches and dough. Go 15-plus cups for serious cooks, large families or regular batch cooking.
Motor power. Wattage determines what your processor can handle. Under 500W works for soft ingredients; 500–750W handles most kitchen tasks; 750W and up powers through nuts, hard cheese, tough dough and frozen ingredients without stalling.
Feed tube size. A wider feed tube means less pre-cutting. Extra-wide tubes accept whole potatoes, tomatoes and cucumbers, while standard tubes require halving or quartering larger ingredients first.
Key features. Look for an adjustable slicing disc to change thickness without swapping blades, a mini-bowl insert for small quantities, a pulse button for control to prevent over-processing, and dishwasher-safe parts for easy cleanup.
How we evaluate
We score every product on five criteria — performance, build quality, ease of use, versatility, and value — weighted toward real-world home use. Our picks combine hands-on use of the gear we own, structured spec comparison across the category, and analysis of thousands of verified owner reviews. We re-check this guide as new models ship and prices move.
The bottom line
The Cuisinart DFP-14BCWN is the best food processor for most kitchens — reliable, powerful and well-priced. For the ultimate processing experience, the Breville Sous Chef is unmatched, and budget buyers will love the Hamilton Beach 10-Cup for its simplicity and value. Whichever you choose, our Kitchen Build Kit shows exactly what to pair it with.
Frequently asked questions
What size food processor do I need, and is bigger always better?
Match bowl size to your cooking, since bigger isn’t automatically better. A 9 to 10-cup model (Ninja BN601, Hamilton Beach 10-Cup) suits everyday chopping, slicing, and small households. A 13 to 14-cup bowl, like our overall pick the Cuisinart DFP-14BCWN, is the family and meal-prep sweet spot and handles dough. A 16-cup (Breville Sous Chef) is genuinely commercial-scale for big batches. The catch with large bowls is that small jobs, like mincing a clove of garlic, get lost in the wide base, which is why models like the Breville and KitchenAid include a mini-bowl. Size for your biggest regular task, not your rarest.
How many watts should a food processor have for tasks like kneading dough?
For dough and tough ingredients, look for 700 watts or more. The Cuisinart DFP-14BCWN’s 720-watt motor kneads dough and chops herbs with equal ease, which is why it’s our top pick. Budget models around 450 watts (Hamilton Beach 10-Cup) handle everyday chopping and slicing fine but can bog down on stiff dough or hard ingredients like raw beets. For maximum power, the Breville Sous Chef and Ninja BN601 both run 1000-watt motors. If you only chop vegetables and make occasional salsa, 450 watts is enough. If bread dough or nut butters are on the menu, prioritize the higher wattage.
What’s the difference between a food processor and a blender, and do I need both?
They solve different problems. A food processor excels at dry and chunky work: slicing, shredding, chopping, kneading dough, and making things like hummus or pesto, using interchangeable discs and a wide bowl. A blender excels at liquids: smoothies, soups, and purees, using a tall jar and a fixed blade. A processor gives you texture control and even slices; a blender gives you smooth liquids. Many cooks genuinely benefit from both. If you must choose one, pick a processor for cooking prep and a blender for drinks. They overlap on purees but neither fully replaces the other.
Are food processor blades and bowls dishwasher safe, and how do I clean them safely?
Most parts here, including the Hamilton Beach and Cuisinart bowls, are dishwasher-safe on the top rack, but the discs and S-blade are extremely sharp, so handle them by the plastic hub, never the cutting edge. For longevity and safety, many owners hand-wash the blades and run only the bowl and lid through the dishwasher. Rinse immediately after use so food doesn’t dry on, and use a brush to clean around the center column. Store sharp discs in a guard or dedicated drawer. The Cuisinart’s lid can be fiddly to align, so let it seat fully before locking and running.
Is the Breville Sous Chef worth the premium over the Cuisinart, or is it overkill?
For most home cooks, the Cuisinart DFP-14BCWN does the core jobs (chopping, slicing, shredding, dough) brilliantly for far less, so the Breville is overkill unless you need its extras. The Breville Sous Chef justifies its premium with a 1000-watt motor, eight disc and blade accessories including julienne and French-fry cutters, a 16-cup bowl plus a 2.5-cup mini bowl, and a SealLock anti-leak system. If you process large volumes, want every cutting style, or cook seriously, it’s essentially a commercial machine at home. But it’s heavy (19 lbs) and takes real counter space. If you don’t need the full disc set, save the money.