Top 10 4-Slice Toasters in 2027 — Best Overall + Best Value
Direct Answer
The Breville BTA840XL Die-Cast 4-Slice wins Best Overall for 2027 with 1800W, die-cast aluminum build, "A Bit More" button, motorized lift-and-look, and an LED countdown that nails consistent toast across all four slots. The Hamilton Beach 24850 takes Best Value at ~$45 — true dual independent controls for left/right pairs, 1.5-inch extra-wide slots, and shade-selector dials that punch well above its price.
This 2027 roundup serves families of 4-6, couples who want bagels and toast at the same time, and anyone tired of two-slice toaster bottlenecks at breakfast.
How We Ranked the Top 10 4-Slice Toasters in 2027
We weighted toasting evenness highest (does slot 4 match slot 1?), then dual independent controls (the make-or-break feature for a 4-slicer — you should be able to run bagels on the left and frozen waffles on the right), then slot width (1.5 inches+ for bagels and artisan bread), shade range and repeatability, build quality, warranty, and price-to-performance.
Sources: Wirecutter's 4-slice toaster guide, Consumer Reports countertop appliance ratings, America's Test Kitchen (Cook's Illustrated) toaster testing, The Spruce Eats, Good Housekeeping Institute, and CNET kitchen reviews.
- Evenness across all 4 slots — 30%
- Dual independent left/right controls — 20%
- Slot width + bagel mode — 15%
- Shade range + repeatability — 15%
- Build, warranty, brand support — 10%
- Price-to-performance — 10%
1. Breville BTA840XL Die-Cast 4-Slice 🏆 BEST OVERALL
Price: $229 | Best for: the family that wants the last toaster they'll buy this decade
The BTA840XL is the Best Overall because it's the rare 4-slicer that nails every box: 1800 watts, die-cast aluminum housing (not painted steel), two independent control zones with separate shade dials 1-5, 1.5-inch extra-wide slots, dedicated bagel + defrost + reheat + cancel buttons per side, "A Bit More" 30-second top-up, "Lift and Look" mid-cycle peek without canceling, motorized lowering and raising ("Lift and Look" + auto-lower), and a bright LED progress bar that counts down to the second.
The crumb tray slides cleanly from the front. Wirecutter's longtime top pick in this category and America's Test Kitchen's highest-scored 4-slice. Cord wrap underneath; 1-year limited warranty (Breville extends with registration).
Footprint is wider than average (~13.5" x 11"), so measure your counter first.
- Pros: die-cast build, true dual zones, motorized lift, even toast slot-to-slot
- Pros: LED countdown beats every dial-only competitor for repeatability
- Pros: "A Bit More" rescues under-toast without a full second cycle
- Con: the biggest footprint on this list — small kitchens may struggle
Verdict: if you can stomach $229, this is the last 4-slice toaster you'll buy this decade.
2. Cuisinart CPT-180 Metal Classic 4-Slice
Price: $129 | Best for: mid-range buyers who want stainless without Breville money
The CPT-180 is Cuisinart's workhorse — 1800W, brushed stainless wrap, 1.5-inch slots, dual control panels with 6 shade settings per side (one more notch than the Breville), and the full bagel + defrost + reheat + cancel quartet. No motorized lift, no LED countdown — you get a classic lever-down, pop-up mechanism — but the toasting consistency is excellent and the wide slots swallow bagels and Texas toast without complaint.
3-year limited warranty beats Breville on paper. The Spruce Eats named it a top pick for best mid-range 4-slice. Slide-out crumb tray, cord storage, lift-lever raises slices for short items.
- Pros: 3-year warranty is the longest in this tier
- Pros: stainless wrap looks premium for half the Breville price
- Pros: 6-shade dial gives finer control than 5-shade competitors
- Con: no motorized lift, no LED — feels basic next to the Breville
Verdict: the smart middle-ground pick if $229 stings but you still want stainless and dual zones.
3. KitchenAid KMT4115CU 4-Slice
Price: $199 | Best for: buyers who already own the KitchenAid matched-color kitchen suite
The KMT4115CU trades raw spec for design language and color matching — the same Contour Silver, Empire Red, Onyx Black, Matte Black palette as the KitchenAid stand mixer. 1800W, dual independent controls, 7 shade settings per side (most on this list), 1.5-inch slots, bagel + defrost + keep-warm + cancel, manual high-lift lever for English muffins, and LED progress bar under each slot pair.
The build is all-metal with die-cast end caps. Consumer Reports rates it strong on evenness, slightly behind the Breville on shade-to-shade repeatability. 1-year hassle-free replacement warranty is genuinely useful.
- Pros: 7 shade settings is the finest control on the list
- Pros: color-matches the KitchenAid mixer for unified counters
- Pros: hassle-free replacement warranty (no shipping back broken units)
- Con: $199 for slightly less performance than the $229 Breville
Verdict: buy if you already own KitchenAid color-matched gear; otherwise pick the Breville.
4. Smeg TSF02 50's Style 4-Slice
Price: $279 | Best for: retro-aesthetic kitchens where the toaster doubles as decor
The TSF02 is the Smeg statement piece — 1500W, rounded chrome bumpers, enamel-coated steel body in pastel cream, black, red, pink, blue, green, mint, and a footprint that looks straight out of a 1956 Frigidaire ad. 6 shade settings, dual independent controls, 1.5-inch self-centering slots, bagel + defrost + reheat + cancel, and a lift-lever pop-up.
Toasting performance is good not great — Good Housekeeping Institute calls it "evenly browned but slow," and the lower 1500W wattage means longer cycles than the 1800W competition. 2-year warranty. You pay $50 over the Breville for the aesthetic — that's the trade.
- Pros: the most beautiful toaster on this list — period
- Pros: enamel-coated steel resists fingerprints and chips
- Pros: 2-year warranty beats Breville
- Con: 1500W is the lowest wattage here — toasting takes longer
Verdict: the design-first pick if your kitchen aesthetic matters as much as your toast.
5. Dualit Classic 4-Slice Vario
Price: $519 | Best for: the cafe-grade buyer who wants a toaster repairable for life
The Dualit Classic Vario is the British workhorse — 2200W, hand-assembled in West Sussex, stainless steel body, ProHeat replaceable elements (you can buy a new heating element and swap it in 10 minutes), mechanical timer dial (no electronics to fail), and a manual eject lever rather than a pop-up spring.
The 1.5-inch slots are deeper than any competitor (perfect for artisan loaves). No bagel mode, no defrost mode, no LED — this is purist toasting. The element warranty is 5 years; the body is lifetime-serviceable through Dualit's parts catalog.
Consumer Reports notes the steep price but lauds the build.
- Pros: replaceable elements — the only toaster here you can repair forever
- Pros: 2200W beats every competitor on raw heat
- Pros: hand-assembled in the UK with serial-numbered units
- Con: $519 with no bagel mode, defrost, or shade memory — purist or bust
Verdict: the buy-it-for-life pick if you'll keep it 20+ years; otherwise the Breville delivers more features for less.
6. Hamilton Beach 24850 4-Slice 💎 BEST VALUE
Price: $45 | Best for: dorms, first apartments, and anyone who wants 4-slice capability under $50
The Hamilton Beach 24850 is Best Value 2027 because it delivers the headline 4-slice features at one-fifth the Breville price: 1400W, true dual independent controls (separate dials, separate levers, separate timers), 1.5-inch extra-wide slots, shade-selector dials 1-7 per side, bagel + defrost + cancel buttons, high-lift lever for short items, and a slide-out crumb tray per side.
The body is stamped steel with cool-touch sides in black, white, red, or silver. Wirecutter's budget pick — they note evenness is "very acceptable for the price" and the dual controls genuinely work. 1-year warranty.
The only material compromise vs. The Breville: no motorized lift, no LED, plastic feel in spots.
- Pros: dual independent controls under $50 — the headline value
- Pros: 7-shade dials give Cuisinart-grade control
- Pros: slide-out per-side crumb trays make cleanup trivial
- Con: plastic-feel lever knobs and shade dials — they work but won't impress
Verdict: the runaway Best Value — for $45, you get 80% of the Breville at 20% of the cost.
7. Black+Decker TR1278B 4-Slice
Price: $55 | Best for: budget buyers who want a longer warranty than Hamilton Beach
The TR1278B is Black+Decker's 4-slicer — 1600W, dual control panels (one for each pair, not full per-slot independence), 1.5-inch slots, shade dials 1-7, bagel + frozen + cancel buttons, lift-lever for short items, and a drop-down crumb tray. The build is all-plastic exterior with stainless accents, which feels cheaper than the Hamilton Beach metal sides but lighter on the counter and easier to wipe.
2-year limited warranty beats Hamilton Beach by a year. The Spruce Eats calls it "the right toaster for a guest house" — solid, forgettable, reliable.
- Pros: 2-year warranty beats most budget competition
- Pros: 1600W is more wattage than the Hamilton Beach
- Pros: lightweight plastic body is easy to move and clean
- Con: paired controls (not full per-slot) means less flexibility than the Hamilton Beach 24850
Verdict: pick if warranty matters more than dual controls; otherwise the Hamilton Beach 24850 is the smarter buy.
8. Oster TSSTTRJB30 Jelly Bean 4-Slice
Price: $59 | Best for: colorful kitchens where the toaster should pop, not blend in
The Oster Jelly Bean is the budget colorful pick — 1500W, rounded "jelly bean" shape, enamel-coated steel in red, blue, green, purple, pink, white, black, dual control panels with 6 shade settings, 1.5-inch slots, bagel + defrost + cancel buttons, lift-lever, and removable crumb tray.
The shape is divisive — some buyers love the curves, others find them dust-trapping. Good Housekeeping Institute notes shade consistency is good for the price and the enamel resists scratches. 1-year warranty.
- Pros: enamel-coated steel in 7 fun colors at a budget price
- Pros: rounded shape softens hard-edged modern kitchens
- Pros: 6 shade settings beat most budget rivals
- Con: 1500W is slower than the 1600-1800W competition
Verdict: the budget color pick — like a Smeg at 1/5 the price with 1/2 the build quality.
9. Frigidaire ECTK-4002 Retro 4-Slice
Price: $65 | Best for: retro-kitchen buyers who can't justify Smeg money
The Frigidaire ECTK-4002 is the budget Smeg alternative — 1500W, rounded retro housing in mint, red, cream, black, blue, chrome-look accents, dual control panels with 6 shade settings, 1.5-inch slots, bagel + defrost + reheat + cancel, lift-lever, and slide-out crumb tray.
The build is painted steel (not enamel like Smeg), so it chips easier, but the silhouette nails the 50's aesthetic for 1/4 the price. 1-year warranty.
- Pros: best Smeg-style aesthetic under $70
- Pros: 5 retro colors match most pastel kitchen palettes
- Pros: reheat mode that the Smeg lacks at this notch
- Con: painted steel chips at the edges over time
Verdict: the retro-on-a-budget pick when the Smeg TSF02 is 3x your budget.
10. Wolf Gourmet WGTR104S-C 4-Slice
Price: $499 | Best for: the luxury kitchen where everything matches the Wolf range
The Wolf Gourmet WGTR104S-C is the luxury-suite pick — 1800W, brushed stainless body with red-knob signature matching the Wolf range, dual independent control zones, 1.5-inch slots, 7 shade settings per side, bagel + defrost + reheat + cancel, digital countdown display (not LED bar — actual seconds), motorized lift, and a 5-year warranty (longest on this list outside Dualit's element guarantee).
Consumer Reports rates evenness on par with Breville. The premium is $270 over the Breville for the Wolf branding, digital seconds display, and 5-year warranty.
- Pros: 5-year warranty is the longest in the consumer-electronics tier
- Pros: digital seconds countdown beats Breville's progress bar
- Pros: matches the Wolf range for high-end kitchen design unity
- Con: $499 is 2.2x the Breville for marginal performance gains
Verdict: pick only if you already own Wolf appliances — otherwise the Breville wins on value at this performance tier.
Buyer Decision Tree — Which One's Right for You?
What to Look For When Buying a 4-Slice Toaster
Five specs matter most for a 4-slice toaster:
- True dual independent controls. Not "two levers, one timer" — you need separate shade dials, separate timers, separate cancel buttons for the left pair vs. Right pair. Half the 4-slicers on the market are really two-slicers stretched wide with one shared control. The Hamilton Beach 24850, Cuisinart CPT-180, Breville BTA840XL, and KitchenAid KMT4115CU all do this right.
- Slot width 1.5 inches minimum. Anything narrower fails on bagels, English muffins, and artisan sourdough. Measure your typical bread before buying.
- Wattage 1500W floor, 1800W preferred. Below 1500W you wait too long; 1800W is the sweet spot for even browning in a single cycle.
- Shade range of 6-7 settings. Anything below 6 settings gives you too-coarse control — you'll end up with "too light" on 3 and "too dark" on 4.
- Build matters more than features. A die-cast or stainless body will outlast a plastic one by 5-10 years. Pay the $30-50 premium if you toast daily.
Common gotchas to avoid: no bagel mode on cheap units (just inner element on, outer off — critical for crisp bagel tops without burning the crumb side); shallow crumb trays that overflow weekly; no high-lift lever (you'll burn your fingers on English muffins); non-cool-touch sides on plastic units (real burn risk near kids); and firmware-free is fine — toasters don't need apps, and any "smart toaster" with WiFi has been a failed product line every time it's launched (June Oven, Revolution Cooking — both struggled).
Two things that don't matter as much as marketing implies: "motorized lift" is a nice-to-have, not need-to-have (a manual high-lift lever costs nothing extra); and digital displays don't toast better than analog dials — the Dualit Classic has been the favorite of professional kitchens for 70 years with a mechanical timer.
FAQ
Why pay $229 for a Breville when a $45 Hamilton Beach does the same thing? Build quality and longevity — the Breville's die-cast aluminum body will last 15-20 years of daily use; the Hamilton Beach plastic-and-stamped-steel body realistically lasts 5-7 years. Cost-per-year is closer than the sticker suggests, but the Hamilton Beach is still the value pick.
Is the Smeg actually worth $279 over a $65 Frigidaire that looks similar? For aesthetics alone, no. For enamel-coated steel that won't chip, a 2-year warranty, and Italian build quality, yes — but only if the look matters to you daily.
Can I toast a bagel and a regular slice at the same time on these? Only on units with true dual independent controls — Breville BTA840XL, Cuisinart CPT-180, KitchenAid KMT4115CU, Hamilton Beach 24850, and Wolf Gourmet WGTR104S-C all let you set bagel mode on the left pair and regular toast on the right pair simultaneously.
Why are there 4-slice toasters with only one set of controls? Because they're cheaper to build — a single thermostat, single timer, single shade dial. Avoid these if you have a multi-person household; they negate the entire reason to buy a 4-slicer.
Do any of these have a warming rack for croissants and pastries? Several Breville and Cuisinart 4-slice models offer warming racks, but not the BTA840XL or CPT-180 specifically. For croissant warming, the Breville BTA730XL Bit More 4-Slice with Warming Rack is a sibling SKU worth checking.
How wide is too wide for a kitchen counter? Most 4-slicers run 12-14 inches wide. The Breville BTA840XL at 13.5" is on the larger side; the Hamilton Beach 24850 at 11.5" is the most compact. Measure before buying.
Bottom Line
For 2027, the Breville BTA840XL Die-Cast 4-Slice is the Best Overall — die-cast build, motorized lift, true dual zones, the consistency to justify $229. The Hamilton Beach 24850 is the runaway Best Value at ~$45 with dual independent controls that most toasters twice its price can't match.
Buy decision in one sentence: spend $229 on the Breville if you'll keep it 15 years, or $45 on the Hamilton Beach if you want 80% of the experience at 20% of the cost. See the Buyer Decision Tree above for the full match-by-use-case map.
Sources
- Wirecutter — *The Best 4-Slice Toaster* (latest guide update — Breville BTA840XL top pick, Hamilton Beach 24850 budget pick)
- Consumer Reports — Countertop Toaster Ratings (Breville, Cuisinart, KitchenAid, Wolf Gourmet all rated)
- America's Test Kitchen / Cook's Illustrated — 4-Slice Toaster Equipment Review
- Good Housekeeping Institute — Best Toasters Tested in the GH Kitchen Appliances Lab (Smeg, Oster, Frigidaire coverage)
- The Spruce Eats — *The 9 Best 4-Slice Toasters* (Cuisinart CPT-180, Black+Decker TR1278B coverage)
- CNET — Kitchen appliance reviews (Breville, Cuisinart 4-slice coverage)
- Reviewed.com (USA Today) — Toaster category testing
- Manufacturer spec sheets: Breville BTA840XL, Cuisinart CPT-180, KitchenAid KMT4115CU, Smeg TSF02, Dualit Classic Vario, Wolf Gourmet WGTR104S-C
- Reddit r/BuyItForLife — Dualit Classic and Breville longevity threads
- Reddit r/Cooking — community sentiment on 4-slice toaster buying