Barista Life Blog · 4 min read

Fellow Aiden vs Moccamaster: precision or simplicity

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The Fellow Aiden lists at $399.95 on fellowproducts.com and the Moccamaster KBGV Select starts at $369 on moccamaster.com, so you are choosing between two premium drip brewers separated by about thirty dollars and two completely different philosophies. The Aiden is a programmable machine with brew profiles, app control, and a thermal carafe. The KBGV Select is a handmade Dutch brewer with one switch, a glass carafe, and a 5 year warranty. Both meet Specialty Coffee Association standards, so cup quality is not the tiebreaker. How you like to work is.

The real gap is control versus repair history

The Aiden's pitch is precision. Fellow lets you combine temperature, timing, and water flow into saved profiles, pick built-in profiles by roast level, or load roaster-recommended recipes. It brews anything from a single cup to a full 1.5 liter carafe, and the single serve mode uses its own basket with standard #2 cone filters. The water tank lifts out so you fill it at the sink instead of pouring through a hatch, and the double-wall thermal carafe means no hotplate cooking your coffee. If you are the kind of barista who dials in a V60 by grams and seconds, the Aiden is that habit in countertop form.

The Moccamaster's pitch is that it has nothing to configure and nothing that breaks. The KBGV Select brews 1.25 liters in 4 to 6 minutes at 196°F to 205°F, which is the Golden Cup window, and it has been doing roughly that since the 1960s design it descends from. The one concession to features is the volume selector switch, which adjusts the brew for a half or full carafe. It is handmade in the Netherlands, carries a 5 year warranty with lifetime repair availability, and the hotplate shuts off automatically after 100 minutes. Every part is serviceable. Plenty of these machines outlive the kitchens they were bought for.

The warranty gap deserves attention. Fellow covers the Aiden for 2 years standard with an option to extend. Moccamaster covers the KBGV Select for 5, and will repair units long after that. A machine with a touchscreen, an app, and firmware has more ways to age badly than a machine with a copper heating element and a switch. That does not mean the Aiden will fail. It means the Moccamaster's simplicity is a durability feature, not a missing one.

Spec comparison

Spec Fellow Aiden Moccamaster KBGV Select
List price $399.95 $369 ($389 for some colors)
Capacity 1.5 L, up to 10 cups 1.25 L / 40 oz, 10 cups
Carafe Double-wall thermal Glass, hotplate with auto-off at 100 minutes
Brew control Custom profiles for temperature, timing, and water flow, plus app control Half or full carafe selector switch
Brew time and temp Varies by profile 4 to 6 minutes at 196°F to 205°F
Single cup mode Yes, dedicated basket with #2 cone filters No
Certification SCA Certified ECBC certified, SCA approved
Warranty 2 years standard, extendable 5 years, lifetime repair availability
Footprint 8.9 x 8.9 x 12 in, 9.6 lbs 14 in H x 12.75 in W x 6.5 in D, 6 lbs
Made in Not stated on product page Netherlands, handmade

Sources: Fellow Aiden product page and Moccamaster KBGV Select product page, checked July 2026.

Which one to buy

Buy the Aiden if you want to taste the difference between a light roast bloomed at one temperature and pulsed at another, if you brew for one person as often as for four, or if a thermal carafe matters because your pot sits for an hour. Buy the KBGV Select if you want the same good pot every morning with zero decisions, you drink the coffee fast enough that a glass carafe on a hotplate is fine, and you want the machine you never think about again. Neither is the wrong answer. The Aiden rewards attention, the Moccamaster rewards ignoring it.

You can check current pricing on Fellow Aiden listings on Amazon and Moccamaster KBGV Select listings on Amazon, since both dip below list price a few times a year.

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More gear comparisons

If this matchup is above your budget, Mr. Coffee vs Black+Decker covers the other end of the drip market. Pod people can compare the Keurig K-Elite vs K-Supreme. And whichever brewer you pick, the grinder matters more than the machine, so start with our guide to the best zero retention grinders.

FAQ

Is the Fellow Aiden SCA certified? Yes. Fellow states the Aiden is SCA Certified and meets the Specialty Coffee Association's standards for brewed coffee quality. The Moccamaster KBGV Select is ECBC certified and SCA approved to the Golden Cup standard, so both machines clear the same quality bar.

Which machine has the better warranty? The Moccamaster, and it is not close. The KBGV Select carries a 5 year warranty with lifetime repair availability, while the Fellow Aiden comes with a 2 year standard warranty that you can pay to extend.

Can the Fellow Aiden brew a single cup? Yes. The Aiden includes a dedicated single serve basket that takes standard #2 cone filters, so it brews anything from one cup up to its full 1.5 liter carafe. The KBGV Select has no single cup mode; its selector switch chooses between a half and full carafe.