Top 10 Electric Pressure Cookers in 2027 β Best Overall + Best Value
Direct Answer
The Instant Pot Pro Plus 6Qt WiFi ($169) is the π BEST OVERALL electric pressure cooker for 2027 β a stainless steel inner pot, 28 smart programs, app-connected scheduling, and the quietest pressure release on the market combine into the most polished daily-driver multicooker money can buy.
The π BEST VALUE pick is the Instant Pot Duo 6Qt ($99): the seven-year-old benchmark that still nails pressure cooking, slow cooking, sautΓ©ing, steaming, yogurt, and rice for under a hundred bucks. This 2027 list serves home cooks who want one appliance that replaces five β from weeknight chili to Sunday short ribs.
How We Ranked the Top 10 Electric Pressure Cookers in 2027
We weighted safety, pressure performance, inner-pot material, preset usefulness, release noise, build quality, and price-to-feature ratio using long-run testing data from Wirecutter (10+ years of Instant Pot coverage), Serious Eats (Daniel Gritzer's pressure-cooker test kitchen), America's Test Kitchen, Hip Pressure Cooking (Laura Pazzaglia, the OG pressure-cooker authority), Consumer Reports, NYT Cooking, and the r/InstantPot subreddit's accumulated user reports.
Weights applied:
- Pressure performance & PSI (25%) β higher PSI = faster cook times and better browning
- Build quality + inner-pot material (20%) β stainless beats nonstick for longevity
- Preset count + actually-useful programs (15%) β not all 14-in-1 marketing claims hold up
- Release noise + safety (15%) β quiet release matters when the cooker lives on your counter
- Smart features + app control (10%) β nice-to-have, not deal-breaker
- Price (15%) β value picks score higher per dollar
1. Instant Pot Pro Plus 6Qt WiFi π BEST OVERALL
Price: $169 | Best for: the cook who wants one multicooker that does everything well and lasts a decade
The Pro Plus 6Qt is the flagship Instant Pot in 2027 and the most refined multicooker we've tested. Capacity is the sweet-spot 6 quarts (feeds 4-6), max working pressure is a strong 12.0 PSI (15 PSI peak), and the unit ships with 28 smart programs including pressure cook, slow cook, sautΓ©, steam, yogurt, rice, sous vide, and Wirecutter's favorite NutriBoost setting.
The stainless steel inner pot is dishwasher-safe and won't flake like nonstick competitors. WiFi + Instant-brand app lets you schedule cooks, monitor temperature, and download community recipes. The patented whisper-quiet steam release measures around 51 dB versus 70+ dB on standard units β a real quality-of-life upgrade in open kitchens.
Includes stainless steamer basket, silicone sealing ring, and a one-year warranty extendable to two. Pros: stainless inner pot, app reliability is finally good, quiet release, 28 useful presets. Con: the app onboarding still asks for too many permissions on first install.
2. Instant Pot Duo Plus 9-in-1 8Qt
Price: $149 | Best for: large families, batch cooks, and anyone running a stockpot operation
The Duo Plus 8Qt is the upsized sibling of the perennial-bestseller Duo and the best big-batch cooker on the list. 8-quart capacity handles whole chickens, two pork shoulders, or a doubled chili recipe without crowding. 9-in-1 functions cover pressure cook (max 10.2-11.6 PSI), slow cook, sautΓ©/brown, steam, yogurt, rice, and a dedicated sterilize program that earned a callout from America's Test Kitchen.
The nonstick inner pot is the one downside versus the Pro Plus β easier to clean but wears in 3-5 years. Blue LCD is bigger and more readable than the original Duo. Comes with steamer rack with handles and recipe booklet.
Dual pressure setting (high/low) covers delicate fish at low and tough cuts at high. Pros: massive capacity, sterilize program is genuinely useful, $50 cheaper than Pro Plus. Con: nonstick inner pot is the long-term weak link.
3. Breville Fast Slow Pro
Price: $249 | Best for: the design-conscious cook who wants premium build and the best slow-cook function
The Fast Slow Pro is the premium-build pick and the only unit on the list with automatic steam release in three modes (auto-quick, auto-pulse, auto-natural). 6-quart capacity, 12 PSI max, 11 pressure-cook presets, and 9 slow-cook presets β Breville is the only brand whose slow-cook mode actually beats a dedicated Crock-Pot in Serious Eats' side-by-side.
The hard-anodized aluminum nonstick bowl is heavier and more even-heating than competitors. LCD with countdown timer is the cleanest UI in the category. Brushed stainless exterior looks at home on a kitchen counter and the 3-way safety system (lid lock + pressure sensor + thermal cutoff) is industry-leading.
Pros: automatic release modes, best slow-cook in class, premium fit and finish, 1-year warranty. Con: $249 is the most expensive entry β overkill if you mostly pressure-cook.
4. Cuisinart CPC-600 6Qt
Price: $129 | Best for: Cuisinart loyalists and cooks who want a no-nonsense pressure cooker without app gimmicks
The CPC-600 is the simplest serious pressure cooker on the list β no WiFi, no app, no 14-in-1 marketing, just a 6-quart brushed stainless unit that pressure-cooks, browns, simmers, sautΓ©s, and warms reliably. Max 10 PSI is on the lower end (slower cook times than the Instant Pot Pro) but 3-way safety locking and a non-stick anodized aluminum cooking pot keep it user-friendly.
Backlit LCD with simple up/down controls β Consumer Reports flagged this as the most senior-friendly UI. Includes glass lid for non-pressure use as a slow cooker. Pros: clean stainless looks, simple controls, glass lid bonus, Cuisinart 3-year warranty (longest in class).
Con: lower PSI means 20-30% longer cook times versus Instant Pot.
5. Ninja Foodi 14-in-1 SmartLid 8Qt OL701
Price: $249 | Best for: cooks who also want an air fryer in the same unit
The Foodi SmartLid is the only pressure cooker that also air-fries thanks to its patented SmartLid with three modes (pressure, air-crisp, steam-crisp). 8-quart capacity, 14-in-1 functions including steam-crisp (Ninja's proprietary combo that steams then crisps in one cycle), dehydrate, proof, sous vide, and yogurt.
Ceramic-coated nonstick pot plus a separate air-crisp basket included. Max pressure runs 10.5 PSI. The dual-pressure setting plus the steam-crisp combo cycle is what makes this a kitchen-replacing machine for small apartments.
Pros: replaces pressure cooker + air fryer + dehydrator, generous accessories, 8qt capacity. Con: the lid is heavy and storage-awkward; two-appliance footprint in one box.
6. Instant Pot Duo 6Qt π BEST VALUE
Price: $99 | Best for: first-time pressure-cooker buyers, college kids, gift recipients β the universal entry point
The Duo 6Qt is the best value in pressure cooking, period β and it's been Wirecutter's budget pick for seven straight years. 6-quart capacity, 7-in-1 functions (pressure cook, slow cook, sautΓ©, steam, yogurt, rice, warm), dual pressure setting (high/low), and 10-15 PSI range.
The stainless steel inner pot (yes, even at $99 β Instant Pot kept it stainless on the base Duo) outlasts every nonstick competitor in this price range. Comes with steamer rack, rice paddle, measuring cup, silicone sealing ring, and a recipe booklet. Big blue LCD, 14 smart programs despite the "7-in-1" naming (each function has multiple presets).
Pros: unbeatable price, stainless inner pot at $99, the most-recipe-tested cooker on the planet, 1-year warranty plus huge resale market. Con: louder steam release than the Pro Plus and no app β but at $70 less, who cares.
7. Crock-Pot Express Crock 6Qt
Price: $89 | Best for: Crock-Pot loyalists who want pressure-cook capability added to their slow-cook routine
The Express Crock is Crock-Pot's answer to the Instant Pot and the cheapest serious unit on the list. 6-quart capacity, 8-in-1 functions (pressure cook, slow cook, steam, sautΓ©/brown, yogurt, rice, warm, plus dedicated "beans/chili" preset), and max 10 PSI.
The nonstick removable cooking pot is dishwasher-safe and the unit retains Crock-Pot's signature stoneware-style aesthetic. The slow-cook function is genuinely better than Instant Pot's (Crock-Pot literally invented slow cooking) β Serious Eats and ATK both noted this.
Comes with trivet and recipe book. Pros: best-in-class slow cook, lowest price for a name-brand unit, familiar Crock-Pot controls. Con: lower max PSI means slower pressure-cook times; nonstick inner pot.
8. Mealthy MultiPot 9-in-1 6Qt
Price: $99 | Best for: cooks who want a free steamer basket and built-in stainless steel at Instant Pot Duo prices
The Mealthy MultiPot is the best Instant-Pot alternative at the same price point. 6-quart stainless steel inner pot, 9-in-1 functions with 14 smart programs, max 12 PSI (higher than the Duo), and the only unit at this price that ships with a stainless steel steamer basket AND a glass lid (both usually $25+ accessories).
Dual pressure plus a manual pressure adjust (rare under $150). Free Mealthy recipe app with 500+ recipes. Pros: higher PSI than Duo at same price, premium accessories included, stainless inner pot, glass lid bonus.
Con: smaller installed base than Instant Pot means fewer YouTube tutorials and replacement parts.
9. Instant Pot Duo Mini 3Qt
Price: $79 | Best for: singles, dorms, small apartments, side dishes, or as a second cooker
The Duo Mini 3Qt is the best small-batch pressure cooker and the unit Wirecutter recommends for one-to-two-person households. 3-quart capacity (perfect for two portions of rice, one chicken thigh dinner, two cups of yogurt), 7-in-1 functions identical to the full Duo, and the same stainless steel inner pot.
Footprint is 11.5" x 10.5" x 10.9" β fits under a standard upper cabinet. Pros: stainless pot at $79, tiny footprint, perfect for side dishes alongside a main cooker, lightweight (8 lb). Con: too small for whole chickens or family meals β pair with a 6qt if you cook for more than two.
10. GoWise USA 8-in-1 6Qt
Price: $79 | Best for: the absolute budget pick where price matters more than brand reputation
The GoWise USA 8-in-1 is the cheapest 6-quart on the list and a legitimate option for budget shoppers. 6-quart nonstick pot, 8-in-1 functions (pressure, slow, sautΓ©, steam, rice, yogurt, soup, warm), max 11.6 PSI, and a 12-preset menu. Includes steam rack, measuring cup, rice paddle, condensation collector, and recipe book β a lot of accessories at the price.
Build quality is the weak link β plastic parts feel cheaper than Instant Pot and the r/InstantPot subreddit notes a higher failure rate at 18-24 months. Pros: lowest price for full 6qt feature set, generous accessories, decent PSI. Con: build quality and customer support don't match the price-leader competition β fine for low-frequency users, not heavy daily use.
Buyer Decision Tree β Which One's Right for You?
What to Look For When Buying an Electric Pressure Cooker
A few specs matter more than the marketing implies:
- PSI matters more than preset count. Higher PSI (11.6-15 PSI) means faster cook times and better browning. The Instant Pot Pro Plus and Mealthy MultiPot both hit 12+ PSI; Crock-Pot Express tops out at 10 PSI and you'll feel the extra 25% cook time on tough cuts. Wirecutter and Hip Pressure Cooking both flag this as the single most overlooked spec.
- Stainless vs nonstick inner pot is a 5-year decision. Stainless (Instant Pot Pro Plus, Duo, Duo Mini, Mealthy MultiPot) lasts decades. Nonstick (Cuisinart, Crock-Pot, GoWise, Ninja, Breville aluminum) is easier to clean but flakes in 3-5 years of daily use. Replacement stainless pots are $30; replacement nonstick pots often cost half the price of a new unit.
- Preset count is mostly marketing. A "14-in-1" badge usually means the same pressure-cook function with different time/temperature presets. What actually matters: dual pressure setting (high/low), sautΓ© (real browning, not warming), slow cook (low + high modes), yogurt, and steam. Anything beyond those five is a nice-to-have.
- Smart app value depends on your routine. The Instant Pot app finally got good in 2026 β scheduling and remote monitoring are useful if your kitchen is far from where you work. If you're standing at the counter anyway, save the $70 and grab the basic Duo.
- Quiet release sealing-ring care. The whisper-quiet release on the Pro Plus is the biggest QoL upgrade in years. Across all units, replace the silicone sealing ring every 12-18 months ($8) β old rings smell like whatever you cooked last and can affect pressure seal. Reddit r/InstantPot considers this the #1 maintenance issue.
What doesn't matter as much as you'd think: WiFi connectivity (90% of cooks never use the app twice), 15+ preset counts (you'll use 5), and fancy LCDs (the original Duo's blue LCD has worked fine for a million households).
FAQ
Is the Instant Pot Pro Plus worth $70 more than the basic Duo? Yes if you cook 3+ times a week and value the whisper-quiet release, stainless pot, and app scheduling. No if you cook occasionally β the Duo at $99 does 95% of the same job.
Does the Ninja Foodi SmartLid replace a separate air fryer? Mostly yes β it air-crisps respectably and saves counter space. Dedicated air fryers crisp slightly better and faster, but the Foodi is the best 2-in-1 we've tested.
How long does an Instant Pot last? Eight to ten years with normal use, based on r/InstantPot longevity threads. Replace the silicone sealing ring annually ($8) and the inner pot if it's nonstick at year 4-5. The stainless inner pot models often outlast the electronics.
Is pressure cooking actually safe? Modern electric pressure cookers have 10+ safety mechanisms (lid lock, pressure sensor, thermal cutoff, anti-block shield). The 1970s pressure-cooker explosions are not how these work β they physically cannot open while pressurized.
Can I can food in an electric pressure cooker? No. Only stove-top pressure canners hit the 15 PSI sustained pressure required for safe USDA canning. Electric pressure cookers (even ones labeled "canning" preset) do not maintain the temperature long enough β Hip Pressure Cooking and Consumer Reports both confirm this.
Use a stove-top canner for preserving.
What size should I buy? 6-quart for most households (1-4 people), 8-quart for families of 5+ or batch cooks, 3-quart for singles or as a side-dish second cooker.
Bottom Line
For 2027, the π Instant Pot Pro Plus 6Qt WiFi ($169) is the Best Overall β quietest release, stainless inner pot, 28 smart programs, and the most polished app in the category. The π Instant Pot Duo 6Qt ($99) is the Best Value β seven years of refinement, stainless inner pot at sub-$100, and the universal first-pressure-cooker that 90% of buyers should grab.
Pick by household size and budget using the Buyer Decision Tree above.
Sources
- Wirecutter β "The Best Multicooker" (annual update, Instant Pot Pro Plus + Duo as top picks)
- Serious Eats β Daniel Gritzer's "Best Electric Pressure Cookers" test kitchen review
- America's Test Kitchen β "Multicookers" equipment review (Instant Pot Pro + Breville Fast Slow Pro)
- NYT Cooking β Melissa Clark's "Dinner in an Instant" cookbook + multicooker comparison
- Hip Pressure Cooking β Laura Pazzaglia's electric pressure cooker reviews and PSI database
- Reddit r/InstantPot β long-term ownership threads, sealing-ring maintenance discussions
- Consumer Reports β "Pressure Cooker Ratings" (subscription) β safety + reliability scoring
- Instant Brands manufacturer spec sheets β Pro Plus, Duo Plus, Duo, Duo Mini
- Breville USA spec sheet β Fast Slow Pro BPR700BSS
- Ninja Kitchen spec sheet β Foodi OL701 SmartLid 14-in-1
- Cuisinart spec sheet β CPC-600 6Qt Electric Pressure Cooker
- Crock-Pot spec sheet β Express Crock 6Qt SCCPPC600-V1