THE DAILY FIND UK CURATED DEALS · GENUINE FINDS
Kitchen

Best Kitchen Deals UK 2026

Updated 2026-06-05 · 10 min read

Across 5 months we've tracked 183 kitchen product lines — here's what the price data shows.

5 Months trackedsince January 2026
183 Products tracked
20.0% Typical saving
£27 Lowest price seen

What we've tracked

Ninja ZEROSTICK Ceramic Pro 18 cm Saucepan From £44.99 Lowest price we’ve tracked 2 variants See variants →
Ninja Ceramic Pro 24 cm Frying Pan From £36.99 Lowest price we’ve tracked 2 variants See variants →
Ninja Ceramic Pro 28 cm Frying Pan From £44.99 Lowest price we’ve tracked 2 variants See variants →
Ninja MAX 6-in-1 Dual Zone Air Fryer 9.5L From £179.99 Lowest price we’ve tracked 2 variants See variants →
Ninja Foodi 3-in-1 Hand Blender, Mixer & Chopper From £99.99 Lowest price we’ve tracked 2 variants See variants →
Ninja Double Stack XL 9.5L Air Fryer From £205.00 Lowest price we’ve tracked 3 variants See variants →

Plus 177 more product lines tracked, ranging £27–£700.

We may earn a commission if you buy through links on this page, at no extra cost to you. Our verdicts are based on price history data, not advertiser relationships.

The kitchen category is one of the broadest and most aggressively marketed in UK retail, which makes it one of the easiest places to overspend. Blenders, air fryers, grills, cookware sets, soup makers, frozen drink machines — the range is enormous, and retailers lean hard on "was/now" pricing that can be difficult to verify. In 2026, the honest truth is that a lot of kitchen appliances hold genuine utility at mid-range price points, but the gap between a fair price and a manufactured deal is wider than ever. Knowing what a product has actually sold for over time matters more than knowing its current listed RRP.

At The Daily Find UK, every kitchen product we track comes with a full price history: the lowest recorded price, the average across all data points, and a live verdict — LISTED, WATCH, or WAIT — that reflects where the current price sits in context. We don't call something a deal because a retailer has crossed out a number. We call it a deal because the data says so. Browse our full Kitchen deals page to see everything we're currently tracking, with verdicts updated as prices move.

What Are You Looking For?

The kitchen category covers a lot of ground, so the most useful thing we can do on this page is point you in the right direction depending on what you're actually shopping for. Air fryers remain one of the most searched kitchen appliances in the UK, and prices fluctuate considerably between retailers and across the year — our Best Air Fryer Deals UK guide tracks the leading models with full price histories, so you can see at a glance whether a sale price is genuinely worth acting on. If you're looking specifically for blending equipment — whether that's a countertop jug blender, a soup maker, or a more compact personal blender — our Best Blender Deals UK guide covers the segment in detail, including which features are worth paying for at different price tiers. For pots, pans, and cookware sets, where the marketing around ceramic coatings and multi-layer construction can be particularly hard to cut through, our Best Cookware Deals UK guide explains what the specs actually mean and which deals represent a genuine step down in price from the norm.

Featured Deals Right Now

These are the kitchen deals currently live on The Daily Find UK, each with a verdict grounded in real price history data.

Ninja 2-in-1 Blender with Auto-IQ in Black/Silver — £99.99

Ninja 2-in-1 Blender with Auto-IQ in Black/Silver
£99.99£149.99save £50 (33%)Lowest price we’ve trackedView deal →

This blender handles both full-capacity jug blending and single-serve cups, with Ninja's Auto-IQ technology automating blend cycles rather than requiring you to hold a button throughout. It suits households that want one machine to cover smoothies, soups, and sauces without managing multiple appliances. The caveat is that Auto-IQ patterns can feel restrictive if you prefer manual control over blend duration. At £99.99, this is the lowest price we have ever recorded for this model across 171 data points, with an average of £100.28 — the price history here is unusually consistent, meaning this sale price genuinely breaks the floor. Verdict: LISTED.

Ninja Foodi Blender & Soup Maker in Black — £129.99

Ninja Foodi Blender & Soup Maker in Black
£129.99£179.99save £50 (28%)Lowest price we’ve trackedView deal →

The Foodi Blender and Soup Maker adds a heating element to the blending function, which means it can take raw ingredients to a finished, heated soup in a single jug without touching a hob. It's a genuinely useful machine for anyone who makes soups or hot sauces regularly, though at this price point it's a harder sell if you already own a separate blender and saucepan setup that works well. The trade-off is capacity — the jug is not enormous, and larger batches will require multiple rounds. At £129.99, this matches the lowest price recorded across 79 data points, with an average of £130.62, meaning this is statistically as low as it gets for this model. Verdict: LISTED.

Ninja Foodi MAX Pro Health Grill, Flat Plate & Air Fryer in Black/Silver — £229.99

Ninja Foodi MAX Pro Health Grill, Flat Plate & Air Fryer in Black/Silver
£229.99£299.99save £70 (23%)Lowest price we’ve trackedView deal →

This three-function appliance combines a ridged health grill, a flat cooking plate, and an air fryer in one unit, which makes it a strong option for smaller kitchens where counter space is at a premium and versatility matters. The grill function genuinely drains fat away from meat during cooking, which is the main differentiator over a standard flat griddle. The size of the cooking surface is the limiting factor — it suits cooking for two comfortably, but feeding more than three people will require batching. At £229.99, this equals both the lowest price ever recorded and the average across 174 data points, which means this sale price is not unusually low — it is simply where this product regularly sits. Worth monitoring rather than rushing on. Verdict: WATCH.

Ninja Extended Life Ceramic 5-Piece Frying Pan & Saucepan Set in Terracotta/Grey — £149.99

Ninja Extended Life Ceramic 5-Piece Frying Pan & Saucepan Set in Terracotta/Grey
Last seen £219.99Price expired — check current priceCheck price →

This five-piece ceramic set covers the everyday cooking essentials — frying pans and saucepans in a coordinated terracotta and grey colourway — with Ninja's Extended Life ceramic coating, which is designed to outperform standard ceramic in terms of longevity before re-seasoning becomes necessary. It suits anyone upgrading a worn-out set and wanting something that looks coherent on the hob. The honest caveat here is significant: across 338 data points, the lowest recorded price for this set is £119.99 against an average of £140.32. At £149.99, you are above both the floor and close to the average, which means this is not a standout moment to buy. If you can wait, this set has sold for considerably less. Verdict: WAIT.

Ninja Extended Life Ceramic 18cm Saucepan in Terracotta/Grey — £41.99

Ninja Extended Life Ceramic 18cm Saucepan in Terracotta/Grey
Last seen £59.99Price expired — check current priceCheck price →

The individual 18cm saucepan from the same Extended Life ceramic range is useful if you want to add a single piece rather than commit to a full set — the 18cm size is a practical everyday pan for sauces, grains, and reheating. The ceramic coating is the main selling point over standard non-stick, though ceramic surfaces do require more careful maintenance to extend their life. At £41.99, the current price sits well above both the lowest recorded price of £29.99 and the average of £31.75 across 218 data points. That is a meaningful gap — this pan has sold for roughly a quarter less than today's price on multiple occasions. Patience is warranted here. Verdict: WATCH.

Ninja SLUSHi XL Frozen Drink Maker in Pink — £249.99

Ninja SLUSHi XL Frozen Drink Maker in Pink
£249.99£329.99save £80 (24%)Lowest price we’ve trackedView deal →

The SLUSHi XL is a large-capacity frozen drink machine designed for home use, capable of producing slushies and frozen cocktails at a volume suited to groups rather than individual servings. It's a niche appliance with genuine appeal for households that entertain regularly or want a summer-season centrepiece, but the price and counter footprint both demand commitment. The caveat is obvious: this is a single-purpose machine at a high price point. At £249.99, this matches both the lowest recorded price and the average across 170 data points — like the Ninja Foodi Grill, the data shows this product rarely dips lower, but it also rarely climbs higher. Verdict: WATCH.

Brand Guides

Ninja dominates the current kitchen deals landscape in the UK across multiple sub-categories, from blending and grilling to cookware and frozen drink making — a range wide enough that it warrants tracking as a brand rather than appliance by appliance. Our Best Ninja Deals UK guide pulls together everything currently discounted across the full Ninja range, with price histories on each model so you can see which products are hitting genuine lows and which are simply cycling through their normal pricing patterns.

What to Look For in Kitchen

In the appliance segment, the most common buying mistake is conflating features with value. A multi-function machine is only worth the premium if you will reliably use more than one function — an air fryer grill combination is excellent value if you use both modes weekly, and poor value if the grill plate never comes off the shelf. At the entry level, prioritise reliability and ease of cleaning over specification. At mid-range, capacity and build quality become the differentiators worth paying for. Above £200 for a single appliance, the question to ask is whether the functionality genuinely cannot be replicated by two cheaper, simpler tools working together.

In cookware, the most persistent source of confusion is coating claims. Ceramic is not inherently superior to PTFE non-stick — each has different care requirements and different longevity profiles depending on how you cook. Induction compatibility matters if you have an induction hob, and is worth verifying before purchasing any set. The other common mistake is buying more pieces than your kitchen storage can accommodate. A tightly chosen three or four-piece set of high-quality pans will serve most households better than a sprawling set where half the pieces are rarely touched.

Is Now a Good Time to Buy?

Looking at the current data, the timing varies sharply by product. The two Ninja blenders — the 2-in-1 Auto-IQ and the Foodi Soup Maker — are both at their recorded price floors, making this a genuinely favourable moment for either of those. The cookware pieces, by contrast, are sitting above their historical lows, and the price data across hundreds of tracking points suggests both will drop lower again. Seasonally, kitchen appliances in the UK tend to follow a predictable pattern: significant discounting around Black Friday in late November, a secondary dip during the Amazon Spring Sale in March, and opportunistic promotions around Prime Day in July. Cookware specifically also sees end-of-line clearance in autumn as retailers make space for new colourway launches.

The Daily Find UK tracks prices continuously, which means you don't need to wait for a sale season to catch a low — products hit their floors at unpredictable moments outside the major retail events, and our verdicts update in real time when they do. For the products currently marked WAIT, the data is clear that patience tends to be rewarded. For the products marked LISTED, the floor is now, and waiting for a further drop is not supported by the price history.

Of the deals live right now, the Ninja 2-in-1 Blender with Auto-IQ stands out as the strongest value proposition — 171 data points confirming a price floor is a robust basis for a recommendation, and £99.99 for a dual-function blender with automated programmes is a fair price at this level of specification. Browse the full Kitchen deals page for everything we're tracking right now, and use the sub-guides for air fryers, blenders, and cookware to go deeper on whichever part of the category you're focused on.

Frequently Asked Questions

If smoothies are your primary use, the Ninja 2-in-1 Blender with Auto-IQ is the more focused choice — it's built around blending performance with Auto-IQ programmes that handle the timing and pulsing automatically. The Foodi Blender & Soup Maker adds a heated blending jug so you can cook and blend soups in one vessel, but that extra function adds £30 to the price and bulk to the machine, neither of which benefits a smoothie-focused buyer. Save the Foodi model for households that genuinely want hot blending as a regular feature.

The flat plate turns the unit into a contact grill that presses food from both sides, which cooks faster and produces char marks you won't get from a basket air fryer. If you regularly cook chicken breasts, steaks, or paninis, that plate earns its keep and the combination genuinely replaces two appliances. Where it loses ground to a standalone air fryer is capacity — dedicated air fryers at this price point typically offer more basket volume for batch cooking chips or roasting vegetables.

Ninja's Extended Life ceramic coating uses a multi-layer construction that's rated to outlast their standard ceramic range, and the pans are metal utensil safe, which removes the main restriction that puts people off ceramic cookware. The 5-piece set includes both frying pans and saucepans, so it can serve as a complete everyday set rather than a supplement to existing cookware. Bear in mind ceramic coatings of any brand still degrade faster than stainless steel if regularly used on very high heat, so keeping the hob below maximum is advisable.

The XL designation refers to the larger bowl capacity, which is designed to produce a higher volume of frozen drink in a single batch — more relevant if you're serving multiple people at once rather than making one drink at a time. For a standard household of two to four people using it occasionally, the standard-sized SLUSHi would likely meet demand without the additional footprint or price. The XL model makes more sense if you're buying it specifically for entertaining or want to run it continuously across an evening rather than between batches.

The Ninja 2-in-1 Blender (£99.99), the Ninja Foodi Blender & Soup Maker (£129.99), the Ninja Foodi MAX Pro Health Grill (£229.99), and the Ninja SLUSHi XL (£249.99) are all currently at their lowest ever recorded prices. The Ninja Extended Life Ceramic 5-piece Set (£149.99) has previously been as low as £119.99, and the Ninja Extended Life Ceramic 18cm Saucepan (£41.99) has previously dropped to £29.99 — both are currently above their historical lows.

The set is currently £149.99 against a historical low of £119.99, meaning you'd be paying £30 more than the best recorded price — a 25% premium over that low. The historical average is £140.32, so the current price is also above the typical selling price, which is why it carries a WAIT verdict. Unless you need it urgently, holding off for a further price drop is the data-backed move here.

A WATCH verdict at the lowest recorded price means there isn't enough price history variation to confidently call it a standout deal — the average recorded price is also £229.99, identical to the current price, which means it has never meaningfully dropped below this level across 174 data points. It's not overpriced, but there's no evidence of a deeper discount ever occurring to justify waiting for one. Buying now gets you the product at its historical floor, but with no proven history of going lower.

At £41.99, the saucepan is £12 above its historical low of £29.99 and significantly above the £31.75 average price across 218 data points — the current price is actually well above the typical selling price, which is an unusual position for a product that has hit that low before. The WATCH verdict reflects this: the data shows it does drop meaningfully, so waiting is the statistically better option if your timeline allows. If you're building a set incrementally and need it now, you're paying a notable premium compared to what's been achievable.