The Keurig 5000350602 is a heavy, metal-bodied K-Cup machine aimed at higher-volume settings rather than the kitchen counter. At around $438 it is priced and built for an office or break room, not a single household coffee habit.
Offices, waiting rooms, and shared spaces that brew K-Cup capsules all day and want a sturdier, metal-housed Keurig with a multi-cup reservoir behind it.
Skip if
You only make a couple of cups a day. The price and 12-pound, 21-inch-tall footprint are hard to justify for a home setup, where a standard countertop Keurig covers the same job for far less.
Priced 192% above the category median ($150.00 across 44 tracked models)
Wattage of 1500 W - higher than 62% of the 44 models we track
Weight of 12.0 lb - heavier than 69% of the 44 models we track
Our scorecard
4.2/5overall
Owner rating4.4/5
4.4 average across 58 owner ratings
Popularity1.0/5
58 owner reviews, fewer than most models here
The overall score is owner satisfaction weighted by how many reviews back it, so a high rating from few reviews counts for less. The bars below show where this model stands against the other coffee makers, kettles and brewers we track in this category on price, popularity and size. Context, not marks against it, and our read of the data, not a lab test.
Overview
This Keurig runs on K-Cup capsules and Keurig-compatible pods through a fully automatic, button-controlled brew cycle. It carries a 1500-watt heater and a 5-cup reservoir capacity, so it can pull several drinks before a refill rather than topping off after every cup.
The build leans commercial. The metal housing and 12-pound weight are a step up from the plastic countertop Keurigs, and the 230-volt, 7.87 x 13 x 21-inch frame signals a unit meant to sit in a fixed spot and take steady use. A reusable filter is included in the platform.
With a price near $438, this is squarely a workplace purchase. The payoff is durability and capacity for a busy pod-coffee environment; the downside is that home users pay for headroom they will rarely use.
Pros
Metal housing built for steady, higher-volume use
5-cup reservoir reduces refills
Fast 1500-watt heating
Accepts K-Cup capsules and Keurig-compatible pods
Includes a reusable filter option
Cons
High price near $438
Large 21-inch-tall, 12-pound footprint
Overkill for low-volume home use
Performance notes
A 1500-watt heater feeds a fully automatic K-Cup brew system with a 5-cup reservoir, controlled by buttons. The metal body, 12-pound weight, and 7.87 x 13 x 21-inch dimensions point to a fixed-location, commercial-style installation rather than a portable countertop brewer.
What buyers say
It holds a 4.4-star average, but only across 58 ratings, so the sample is small. Early feedback is favorable, though there is not yet the deep review history you would see on Keurig's mainstream home models.
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