Kafatek Monolith Flat (Titan SDRM) vs Mazzer Mini G

Same class, different tax brackets.

The Monolith Flat (Titan SDRM) runs ~52% more (listed in different currencies) — the split below is what the gap buys.

The Monolith Flat (Titan SDRM) is made to order (waitlist, not checkout) — read its side accordingly.

Kafatek Monolith Flat (Titan SDRM)

Kafatek

Strong consensus
Monolith Flat (Titan SDRM)

US$2,650

This is a hand-built, CNC-machined single-doser that trades every convenience feature for alignment, retention, and burr quality. Accept the multi-month preorder wait, the static and mess of…

Full record & live prices →
Mazzer Mini G

Mazzer

Strong consensus
Mini G

CA$2,200–2,500 · US$1,795–1,995

This is the old bulletproof Mazzer Mini shape with a scale grafted in, and it does exactly what it promises: same dose in, same dose out, shift after shift. Accept the roughly 8-gram hopper…

Full record & live prices →

The split

Where they actually differ

On 4 of 7 measures these two tie. The 3 rows below are the entire argument.

Monolith Flat (Titan SDRM)

Mini G

Retention

Monolith Flat (Titan SDRM) leads, decisively

~0.5 g· ~8 g

The price

Mini G costs less, decisively

US$2,650· CA$2,200–2,500

Quiet operation

Monolith Flat (Titan SDRM) leads, clearly

Brew range

Monolith Flat (Titan SDRM) leads, clearly

weakerstronger

Syrup & bodyClarity & sparkle

The Monolith Flat (Titan SDRM) leans clarity and sparkle; the Mini G leans syrup and body. Pick the cup, not the machine.

The counter’s vote

Looks barely figure in either machine’s record — the counter can sit this one out.

Monolith Flat (Titan SDRM): Industrial CNC aesthetic — minimalist aluminium tower, zero ornamentation. Community remarks are neutral-to-positive on this (built-for-function, not flash), but design appeal does not measurably…

Mini G: Utilitarian, industrial aesthetic — no kitchen-approval polarization; looks are intentionally transparent, not a purchase driver or detractor.

Only the Monolith Flat (Titan SDRM): a single-dose workflow.

Only the Monolith Flat (Titan SDRM): a documented burr-swap scene.

Where they tie: espresso duty · reliability record · built to last · value per dollar — don’t let a spec sheet invent a difference.

So — which one?

Take the Monolith Flat (Titan SDRM) if —

  • Bright, separated cups are the goal
  • You rotate beans and hate purging
  • There are sleepers to protect
  • You brew more ways than one

Take the Mini G if —

  • Syrupy, traditional cups are the goal
  • The difference stays in your pocket — or goes into beans

The Monolith Flat (Titan SDRM) at ~52% more buys real things: retention and quiet operation. If those aren't your mornings, the Mini G does the job and keeps the difference in your pocket.

Known weak points

Mini G

Brush wear on older models (documented in Home-Barista threads); motor longevity documented as excellent with proper maintenance; no widespread catastrophic failure pattern reported.

For the row-by-row readers

The whole sheet, side by side

Matching rows fade back — the ink is where they differ.

Monolith Flat (Titan SDRM)

Mini G

Class

Single dose

Midrange

Burrs

80mm flat

64mm flat

Drive

Electric

Electric

Adjustment

Stepless

Stepless

Clarity lean

Clarity & sparkle

Syrup & body

Espresso suitability

5/5

4.5/5

Brew versatility

3.5/5

2.5/5

Retention

~0.5 g

~8 g

Single dosing

Yes

No

Hopper

40 g

600 g

Burr-swap scene

Documented

Maintenance

2/5

2.5/5

Noise

1.5/5

3/5

Build longevity

5/5

4.5/5

Dimensions

16.5 × 20.6 × 35.5 cm

Workflow demand

1.5/5

Wrong match-up? Change one side → — any two on file compare.

Still torn?

This page weighs them against each other. The finder weighs them against your mornings.

Two minutes of questions — milk, noise, budget, space — scored across everything on file. It’s honest when the answer is neither of these.

Take the two-minute finder →