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Impressa C60 (Product code: 15006)

Jura - Impressa C60 (Product code: 15006)

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Based on 1 year's data from Mar 20, 2026 How it works

Reddit IconWeeDado 1.0
r/superautomaticWhich superautomatic espresso machine is worth buying for quality and longevity?
3 days ago

I’ve had a JuraC60 for years. It just started having issues and had it serviced…took 3 months but got it fixed. In the interim we tried the Bosch 800….there was a drastic difference in quality we noticed with espresso and coffee. Glad to have our jura back

Reddit Iconone_scalloped_potato 0.1
r/BuyItForLifeBIFL automatic espresso machine?
11 months ago

I echo what everyone has said here, the brew group needs maintenance. HOWEVER, with a clear afternoon and $20 of parts on eBay I was able to rebuild the brew group on my jura impressa machine. That's pretty goddamn BIFL for me.

Reddit Iconcappo3 0.0
r/espressoOffice “Espresso” [$5000-10000]
about 1 month ago

I’ve put a Bezzera Magica (no plumbing) and an Eureka Mignon Specialità in the office kitchen, next to a Jura super automatic. 80% of the staff prefers the Jura, while the rest makes for maybe 20 coffee drinks a day on the Bezzera. It works beautifully, I’d say.

Reddit IconCompetitive-Fox9615 0.0
Reddit Icondarekd003 0.0
r/CostcoCanadaCostco doesn't have a decent espresso machine
4 months ago

Completely different set up. The Jura is a super automatic: press one button and it’s makes you a tasty coffee (that the vast majority of people will be very happy with, myself included). The breville is a semi automatic that happens to have a built in grinder. You grind into a portafilter, level, tamp, insert the portafilter and then brew your coffee. Also probably very tasty for most people but with added variables. Both types require maintenance. VERY important maintenance. I had a super automatic (Saeco) for about 15 years until the control unit died and it was discontinued. Very tasty coffee. But I wanted less maintenance (almost none) and don’t ever drink milk based drinks so I was paying for features that I’d never use. So I got a level machine (flair 58), a nice grinder for less than (niche zero) and a nice kettle (fellow ekg pro) for less than what it would’ve cost to replace my super automatic. I control the grind size, the water temperature and the pressure to make my espresso. Morning coffees are now “more work” but I personally enjoy the ritual while recognizing it isn’t for everyone.

Reddit IconDry-Winter-14 0.0
r/AppliancesOn a best espresso machine hunt after spending way too much at coffee shops this year
4 months ago

Do it! We got a jura super automatic from Seattle coffee gear 15 years ago. It's still kicking out great shots daily.

Reddit Iconifain 0.0
r/espressoOffice Espresso Machine [$1,800-$2,200]
3 months ago

Just get a Jura. It’s the best full auto machine for the office. I’ve been at the offices of the largest orgs in the world for 25 years and even Jura is like top 5%. No one has semi-autos for public use.

Reddit IconPale_Papaya_531 0.0
r/nespressoNespresso lovers that made the switch to a real espresso machine. Which one did you get? How much did it cost? Any regrets?
3 months ago

My family has espresso machines. My dad is obsessed in the past two decade they have tried at least 6 or 7 different machines upgrading each time. Honestly the Jura fully automatic machines that grind, fill, dispense and eject grounds are the only way to go. Everything else is to much work. Are these machines expensive? Yes. But they make incredible drinks with the least work. You still have to clean the milk system, descale, and empty the water and ground catchers but compared is the rest it is worth it. If I had 3 thousand dollars I would have one of those. But my vertuo will suffice til then

Reddit Iconvictorpaparomeo2020 0.0
r/CasualIrelandTalk to me about coffee machines
4 months ago

Jura bean to cup owner for 25 years. On my second machine. Original now in my holiday spot. Anyway. Beans go in and really good coffee comes out.

Reddit IconWorldly-Working-1764 0.0
r/espressoBest machine for a "semi-commercial" setting where the barista would likely receive limited training? Would a superautomatic, like a Jura, or a semiautomatic, like the Nuova Simonelli deliver a better experience? [budget $5k to $10K]
about 1 month ago

If you want reliable, decent drinks with almost no training go superautomatic (Jura etc.), they cut out most user errors. But if you can really train that one person and care about top-notch espresso, the Nuova Simonelli will make better shots — juste plus de taf. For an onboarding area I’d lean superauto for consistency.

End of reviews