Shopping for an iced tea maker gets confusing fast because the numbers that matter, how many liters it brews, how many watts it draws, what the pitcher is made of, are scattered across individual product pages. This tool pulls those specs into a single table so you can read across a row instead of flipping between browser tabs.
To use it, select two or more iced tea makers from the list. The table fills in immediately with the specs drawn directly from manufacturer listings: capacity in liters, body and pitcher material, wattage, control type (buttons, dial, or digital), and available colors. You are reading the same numbers the brands publish, nothing estimated, nothing averaged.
Focus on capacity first if you brew for a crowd, then check material if you prefer glass over plastic, then wattage if brew speed matters to you. Controls is worth a look too: some brewers are a single button, others let you set steep time or strength. Use the color column last, it matters for countertop fit but not for the tea.
Every figure in the table comes from the manufacturer's product listing or packaging, capacity, wattage, material, and so on. We do not estimate or adjust any spec.
What does 'controls' mean in the spec table?
Controls describes how you operate the brewer. A basic single-button model starts one fixed brew cycle. A dial or multi-button unit may let you choose strength or steep time. A digital model typically shows a display and offers programmable settings.
Is a higher wattage brewer better?
Higher wattage usually means faster heating, which can shorten the time to a finished pitcher. Whether that matters depends on your routine. If you brew ahead and refrigerate, a lower-wattage model works fine.
Does capacity listed in liters match the pitcher I see in photos?
Yes, the capacity figure is for the finished pitcher the brewer ships with. One liter is roughly 33 oz or about four 8-oz glasses, so a 2 L model fills eight glasses per batch.
Can I compare more than two iced tea makers at once?
Yes. Add as many models as you like and they appear as additional columns. Narrowing to two or three makes the table easier to scan, but there is no hard limit.
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