Best Microwave 2024: Top microwaves and combi ovens
When you think of kitchen appliances, you can’t forget one of the most versatile pieces of equipment on your counter: the microwave.
Microwaves are one of the quickest and easiest ways to heat up food, with combination microwaves offering additional functions, including convection and grill modes depending on the models you choose.
Combi microwaves often feature individual programmes for veg, potatoes, popcorn and more, with high-end opinions even offering dozens in some instances, though these aren’t always cheap. The same goes for the size of your microwave and its internal capacity. You’ll want to make sure you budget for a model that can fit in your space – whether that means opting for a freestanding or an integrated model – and that the inside of the microwave is big enough to house your widest plates and tallest containers. Paying more for a microwave can also afford you more power, as expensive models often carry higher wattages.
However, this doesn’t mean you can’t find a microwave that fits your criteria on a budget. It’s important that any good microwave offers great value for money as no one wants to be stuck overpaying for a kitchen appliance.
We’ve identified all of our highest-rated microwave reviews and compiled them into one handy list, making it easy to narrow down your search to only the best flatbed and turntable models on the market for each use case.
When we review a microwave, we inspect every aspect from its design and capacity to the cooking features it includes and the power it promises. We put each model through rigorous real-world tests, defrosting bread, reheating cooked rice, cooking jacket potatoes and more to ensure only the best of the best make the cut.
Below you’ll find a list of our favourite microwaves at a glance. You can also scroll down further for a brief summary of each model, along with pros and cons and links to our full, in-depth reviews.
Best microwave at a glance
- Best overall: Sage Combi Wave 3 in 1 – check price
- Best integrated microwave: Hotpoint MP676IXH – check price
- Best combi oven: Panasonic NN-CS89LBBPQ – check price
- Best for automated programmes: Samsung Easy View Convection Oven with HotBlast Technology MC28M6075CS – check price
- Best budget microwave: Russell Hobbs Scandi Digital Microwave – check price
- Best budget combi oven: Hotpoint MWH 26321 MB – check price
How we test
We test microwaves to see how good they are at their main job. For that, we start with tests designed for the microwave mode only. These include reheating rice and toasting bread, using a thermal camera to see exactly how well (and how evenly) the microwave heats.
We also cook a baked potato, using a microwave-only mode if that’s available, but we’ll use a combi mode, adding convection oven or grill, to see how this works.
Where microwaves have a grill, we test them with bread and see how even the grilling is across as many slices as we can fit into a product.
We’ll also test convection oven settings by heating a baking tray full of ceramic cooking beads, and then using a thermal camera to view how evenly the oven heats.
If there are other key functions, such as air frying, steaming or crisping, we try these out following suggestions in the manual.
- Easy to use
- Versatile
- Powerful and fast
- Large
- Expensive
- Lots of cooking modes
- Huge number of accessories
- Cooks evenly
- Only space for one oven shelf
- Versatile
- Spacious
- Self cleaning
- Expensive
- Not very intuitive
- Some uneven results
- Great crisping
- Wide range of programmes
- Clear control panel
- Some auto programmes are confusing
- Some unevenness
- Poorly written manual
- Auto-cook programmes
- Affordable
- Good cooking results
- Fits smaller plates only
- Not the most intuitive
Sage Combi Wave 3 in 1
The best overall microwave
Pros
- Easy to use
- Versatile
- Powerful and fast
Cons
- Large
- Expensive
The quality of the Sage Combi Wave 3 in 1 is obvious: the intuitive design has a premium feel, and the large LCD, clear buttons and shortcuts make it very easy to use. As a combination microwave, it also works as a convection oven and an air fryer, as well as boasting a grill function and a range of smart programmes and pre-sets.
With its spaceship-like design and proportions, the Sage Combi Wave 3 in 1 isn’t for every kitchen, and it’s also rather pricey. But it’s versatility is handy, as are the combi mode-compatible metal trivet and crisper pan with foldable legs. The manual outlines specific functions, including which receptacle to use for which mode, and recipe ideas are available as an e-book on the Sage website.
Defrosting frozen bread and reheating cooked rice yielded even results overall. The rice itself was prepared using the minimal-effort rice programme. A raw jacket potato took only 7mins to cook in the microwave-only mode, coming out soft and fluffy. Combi mode took longer but resulted in brown, crispy skin and a soft, mash-like middle.
The grill proved a little weak for toasting the defrosted bread, but a combi cooking programme for a 1.6kg chicken browned its skin nicely, and air frying frozen chips crisped them up well.
If you’d like a powerful microwave that can also function as a back-up oven and an air fryer, the Sage Combi Wave 3 in 1 is a solid choice. The smart programmes and combi settings help to take out the guesswork and cut the cooking time of many household staples.
Full review: Sage Combi Wave 3 in 1 review
Reviewer: Helen Harjak
Samsung Easy View Convection Oven with HotBlast Technology MC28M6075CS
The best microwave for automated programmes
Pros
- Very easy to use
- Automated cooking programmes work brilliantly
- Can do many jobs that an oven can do
Cons
- Need space for all the accessories
If there’s one problem with microwaves, it’s trying to work out how to choose the right setting for the right dish. The Samsung Easy View Convection Oven with HotBlast Technology MC28M6075CS makes this easier, with some very clever automated programmes.
The smartest mode is the Sensor cooking. In this mode, the microwave can cook a range of different ingredients, including jacket potatoes, cauliflower and chilled soup. Measuring the gasses released from foods, the microwave can stop cooking at the optimal point: I found it made my jacket potato perfect: fluffy on the inside, cooked all the way through and not shrivelled up.
HotBlast modes can be used with the baking tray to cook common foods, such as oven chips, using the convection oven feature and blasting air down from the top element. Here, we found the results good, although we did find that an air fryer will give crispier results.
We love the automatic defrost programmes: select the food type and weight, and the microwave handles the rest. Our test bread slices were cool to the touch but not frozen, and leaving them for just a couple of minutes had them ready for sandwiches.
More than just a microwave, the Samsung Easy View Convection Oven with HotBlast Technology MC28M6075CS is a handy convection oven, too. With its very smart automated programmes, it can cook food beautifully with virtually no hassle.
Full review: Samsung Easy View Convection Oven with HotBlast Technology MC28M6075CS
Reviewer: David Ludlow
Hotpoint MP676IXH
The best integrated microwave
Pros
- Lots of cooking modes
- Huge number of accessories
- Cooks evenly
Cons
- Only space for one oven shelf
The Hotpoint MP676IXH isn’t just a standard integrated microwave: it’s also a grill and convection oven that outperforms a regular oven when it comes to certain dishes. Offering a wide range of cooking modes, including automatic programmes, it gets the basics right and delivers good results.
As a turntable microwave, any containers used for microwaving need to fit onto the turntable and allow it to rotate. Fortunately, the Hotpoint MP676IXH is large enough to even fit the widest of dinner plates.
Hotpoint also provides a huge range of accessories with this model, including a large vegetable steamer, a wire rack, a plate cover to avoid random splatter, and a crisp plate with handle, meant for use with the Crisp Dynamic function. A baking tray that slots into the middle of the appliance is also provided, circumventing the turntable while in convection mode.
While the frozen chips cooked with the Crisp Dynamic mode didn’t quite live up to a specialist air fryer, the Hotpoint MP676IXH’s microwaving is powerful and the grill function excellent, delivering even results.
Full review: Hotpoint MP676IXH review
Reviewer: David Ludlow
Panasonic NN-CS89LBBPQ Combination Microwave Oven
The best combi oven
Pros
- Versatile
- Spacious
- Self cleaning
Cons
- Expensive
- Not very intuitive
- Some uneven results
With its drop-down door, the spacious Panasonic NN-CS89LBBPQ looks more like an oven than a microwave, but its real shining point are the plentiful auto programmes, covering defrosting, steaming, grilling, roasting and baking.
The oven space is the most generous we’ve seen thanks to the flatbed design and the three tray slots, which allow several items to be cooked at the same time on different levels, further emphasised by the auto programmes’ ability to cook as much as 2kg of meat.
The accessories include a wire shelf, enamel and glass trays as well as a plastic trivet meant specifically for steaming tasks.
One highlight is a humidity-measuring auto sensor combi programme that adjusts the power level and cooking time accordingly and delivers a jacket potato with crispy skin and fluffy texture.
For the steam function, a water tank and a drip tray are located at the bottom of the appliance. The drip tray handily stops water from running onto your worktop when the oven door is opened.
Very conveniently, the NN-CS89LBBPQ is also self-cleaning, with four steam function-based cleaning settings, including deodorisation and cavity cleaning to remove grease build-up inside the oven.
While navigating its touch-sensitive controls and deciphering the various programmes isn’t always intuitive, a thick instruction manual is provided, also featuring some 40 pages of recipes.
Full review: Panasonic NN-CS89LBBPQ review
Reviewer: Helen Harjak
Russell Hobbs Scandi Digital Microwave
The best budget microwave
Pros
- Auto-cook programmes
- Affordable
- Good cooking results
Cons
- Fits smaller plates only
- Not the most intuitive
The Russell Hobbs Scandi Digital Microwave stands out among its affordable peer group due to the addition of a couple of simple auto-cook programmes that calculate the cooking time according to the food’s weight. It’s also not as small as a 17-litre capacity may lead you to believe. However, with a 245mm turntable, it doesn’t fit larger dinner plates.
While the combination of shiny glass, plastic and metal with walnut-imitation wood is a very particular look, likely to have a Marmite effect, the Scandi Digital is available in black, grey, and white to suit different colour schemes.
Its auto-cook menu has eight programmes, for reheating food and microwaving popcorn, beverages, pizza, sliced potatoes, vegetables, meat, and fish. Using the reheat programme, cold, cooked rice came out evenly heated. And a raw jacket potato had a decent texture after just 8mins of microwaving.
This is a handy appliance for anyone looking for some microwaving shortcuts.
Full review: Russell Hobbs Scandi Digital Microwave review
Reviewer: Helen Harjak
Hotpoint MWH 26321 MB
The best budget combi oven
Pros
- Great crisping
- Wide range of programmes
- Clear control panel
Cons
- Some auto programmes are confusing
- Some unevenness
- Poorly written manual
The Hotpoint MWH 26321 MB is a mid-range microwave with a flatbed design and built-in grill. Its sleek black design oozes sophistication and the fittings are nicely textured and of high quality.
The MWH 26321 MB’s controls are easy-to-understand and it comes with a wire rack and a baking tray-like crisp plate with handle and rack. The latter is used for crisping tasks, such as programmes for fries and fish fingers, as well as a weight-based Bread Defrost programme, which both defrosts and grills bread and pastries.
The auto programmes are plentiful, but some of them are oddly specific and come with recipes, such as Bolognese Meat or Vegetable Cream Soup. Other programmes include the usual pizza, chicken nuggets, fish fingers and fries, as well as more esoteric options like entrecote and croque monsieur, and a somewhat unnecessary 20-minute Toast programme.
Although there is no combi programme for preparing a jacket potato, the MWH 26321 MB is still powerful enough to cook a 400g potato at 800W microwave power in about 10mins.
While there was some unevenness during defrosting and reheating, this could be resolved by rotating your containers during cooking when stopping to stir or flip your food.
Full review: Hotpoint MWH 26321 MB review
Reviewer: Helen Harjak
FAQs
The answer depends on whether you’d use them or not. A grill or convection oven combined with a microwave can give you additional cooking space, or the ability to combine programmes, say grilling and microwaving at the same time, to speed up cooking.
The more power, the faster the microwave will cook, but that can be a double-edged sword. Warming up your dinner with the 1000W setting may be overkill and leave you with burnt bits. However, heating water in a jar to steralise it may benefit from higher settings.
Flatbed microwaves often need food to be turned manually to get even results but you get more space in them and can use irregular-sized pots and containers; turntable microwaves cook more evenly but you’ve got less room and are restricted in the size of container you can use.
Measured in litres, the internal size tells you how big the cavity is. The bigger the household, the larger the microwave you’ll want. Also consider use; if you occasionally heat some pasta sauce or reheat the occasional left-overs, then a smaller microwave will do you.
Neither’s better, but integrated models are neater as they’re permanently installed and often have larger capacities. They’re a good choice if you’re having a new kitchen and have place to permanently put a microwave, although seriously consider a combi model that can act as a second oven, as this gives you more cooking options. Freestanding models are generally cheaper and come in a wider range of sizes. As they just plug in, they’re easier to change if something goes wrong, and you can take them with you if you move house. Freestanding models are a good upgrade if you’ve got all of your integrated appliances already, or only have room for a single integrated oven.