Search  for anything...

Cuisinart Supreme Grind Automatic Burr Mill (Renewed)

  • Based on 778 reviews
Condition: Excellent Condition (Refurbished)
Checking for product changes
$49.99 Why this price?
Save $9.96 was $59.95

Buy Now, Pay Later


As low as $8.33 / mo
  • – 6-month term
  • – No impact on credit
  • – Instant approval decision
  • – Secure and straightforward checkout

Ready to go? Add this product to your cart and select a plan during checkout. Payment plans are offered through our trusted finance partners Klarna, PayTomorrow, Affirm, Apple Pay, and PayPal. No-credit-needed leasing options through Acima may also be available at checkout.

Learn more about financing & leasing here.

Free shipping on this product

This item is eligible for return within 30 days of receipt

To qualify for a full refund, items must be returned in their original, unused condition. If an item is returned in a used, damaged, or materially different state, you may be granted a partial refund.

To initiate a return, please visit our Returns Center.

View our full returns policy here.


Availability: In Stock.
Fulfilled by Amazon

Arrives Wednesday, May 22
Order within 17 hours and 33 minutes
Available payment plans shown during checkout

Features

  • This Certified Refurbished product is manufacturer refurbished, shows limited or no wear, and includes all original accessories plus a 90 day warranty
  • Quantity Control / Timer, Removable Beans Container and Removable Ground Coffee Container
  • 90 Day Manufacturer Warranty

Description

Stainless Steel Housing


Product Dimensions: 6 x 7 x 11 inches


Item Weight: 4.9 pounds


Manufacturer: Cuisinart


Item model number: DBM-8FR


Is Discontinued By Manufacturer: No


Date First Available: October 15, 2006


Frequently asked questions

If you place your order now, the estimated arrival date for this product is: Wednesday, May 22

Yes, absolutely! You may return this product for a full refund within 30 days of receiving it.

To initiate a return, please visit our Returns Center.

View our full returns policy here.

  • Klarna Financing
  • Affirm Pay in 4
  • Affirm Financing
  • PayTomorrow Financing
  • Apple Pay Later
Leasing options through Acima may also be available during checkout.

Learn more about financing & leasing here.

Top Amazon Reviews


  • All I really know is that I like freshly, consistently ground arabica beans that are brown
This is my first electric burr grinder. For as much coffee as I drink I really haven't bothered to learn much about making coffee. All I really know is that I like freshly, consistently ground arabica beans that are brown, not black. I seriously need to advance my knowledge beyond that. I will say that this grinder produces a fair amount of fine dust along with any coarseness of grounds, which I'm told is the sign of a cheap coffee grinder. OTOH it does a night-and-day better job than my previous, blade-chopping "grinder". I had to choose a new grinder in a hurry because my old one broke down. Also the static cling on the plastic hopper is pretty bad. I do what I read in another review: I just shake the grounds (and dust) out of the hopper through its intake hole. That keeps mess to a minimum. I bought a refurbished one since I figure such a grinder will have received much more QC attention than a standard assembly-line example. I also got the extended protection plan, which buys me a few years' worth of maintenance, which at least forestalls this thing's date with a landfill (SIGH)... I hate buying disposable appliances/amusements, but I was overwhelmed with research on grinders ranging from $30 to $3,000. My plan is to use this grinder to simply defer the decision. I will use this for [I think 3 years?] after which I expect it to expire and nobody will be willing to fix it. At that point I will have accumulated enough knowledge to purchase a grinder that I can use my whole life, and somebody else can enjoy it when I'm gone. My next/final one will be a highly regarded, serviceable, conical burr grinder with a glass receptacle - that's all I know so far. Now that I'm thinking about it, the purchase price seems good until I consider that I'm really just buying time to figure out which grinder I really want. I'm not proud of buying something that was clearly designed to be disposable. EDIT 2016.05.20: I spent a week in Portland, and it pretty much ruined my life. Sampling the lifestyles there there has warped my mind like few things ever have. I now ride a bicycle pretty much everywhere I go - got rid of one car (share one with wife). I have lost all interest in chain restaurant food. After a week of swimming in really great coffee - culinary *experience* coffee - it's too hard to go back to my old, lower standards. I finally started to read up on home roasting and brewing. I bought a Lido 3 hand grinder and I hacked my second popcorn roaster to add temp and fan controls (fire hazard - don't do it)! I found Kansas City's only top-tier coffee joint, Oddly Correct, and I bug them with questions. I've been to About the Coffee once and plan to take some classes there. I took the factory tour at Roasterie. I think the Cuisinart was a good stepping stone for me. At the time I was hooked on "good" coffee but I wasn't interested enough to dump lots of hours into learning the whole process of making iteratively better coffee at home. This grinder is good in that it is reliable and consistent (from grind to grind). I put numbers on the coarseness dial with a fine Sharpie - returning to the click marked "6" will mean the same thing today that it did a year ago. A year ago my main problem with this grinder seemed like a quibble: it produces a lot of fine dust. Now that I'm beefing up my skills in taking coffee from green beans to finished drink, this shortcoming is becoming a limiter. The static cling is annoying but I can totally live with that. I'm a hardcore coffee junkie now - to get my daily fix I would be stealing ratty old bicycles and smashing the front windows of pawn shops if it came to that. I see the extreme lengths to which some people go to get a better cup of coffee and I can totally imagining my own mental state degrading to the same level of obsession. Static cling is the least of my problems. I'm satisfied that I took my coffee making as far as it can go with this grinder. At the time of purchase I thought it was a real step up - going from a blade type coffee chopper to a grinder with "burr" in the name - WOW haha! It's like all my hobbies - all I needed when starting out was to *think* I had good gear and the excitement carried me through. And to be fair this grinder was a huge step up from a blade type chopper. I'm happy for the experience I had with this Cuisinart grinder, but I wouldn't recommend it for anyone wanting to make good coffee. I'm satisfied that I got my money's worth out of it - I bought a refurbished one with a 3-year warranty, which was the epitome of cheap reliability. I will continue to use it when a portable hand grinder is unsuitable (volume, time, broken arm, Japanese apartment with insufficient room to extend both elbows). If you are currently satisfied with the coffee you drink at home and you just want a fast way to grind beans, then count yourself lucky and be happy with the Cuisinart grinder. This is luck on the order of maturing to adulthood without ever learning about war, famine, or the question of whether god exists. Here is my advice to people who want the whole coffee experience - zen rituals of preparation, culinary exploration, etc. Plan to invest in an immersive hobby. Invest in the following order: TIME: research, finding the best coffee joint in town, taking classes, plan a vacation around coffee tasting and learning. start by finding people who demonstrate their expertise by handing you a cup of the best coffee you've ever had. everyone can talk, but not everyone can roast and brew. those who can, can recommend books BOOKS: get some real info. the internet is full of people who get all their info from the internet. At my current, novice level it is too hard for me to discern real experts from randos. GEAR: roaster, grinder, brew gear. Stay on guard for gear fetishism - it seems to affect a lot of coffee enthusiasts. Remember that you love *coffee* - not coffee *gear*. For me a reliable guide to gear and utility is to stand in a room, meditate for a minute, open my eyes, and ask, "What in here is ugly?" - and then get rid of the ugly things. Ugliness extends to every criterion: utility, aesthetics, undefined sensibilities. When used as my exclusive method - i.e. no "What's the best I can get?" or "What are the available choices?" - I end up with very good gear that works great and looks appropriate for my house. I end up with the *right* gear. A consort of good coffee gear is like an ad-hoc sculpture - perfection is achieved by removing that which doesn't belong. Adding more *stuff* is generally a step in the wrong direction. Aggressively avoid advertising for coffee gear, which includes the pap that passes for journalism. It's like *Raiders of the Lost Ark*: one look and you will be destroyed. Focus on one thing at a time. Probably stay in the area of brewing first, then move on to roasting. Progressively wean off the best, fresh-roasted beans in town to your own, home-roasted beans. Forget about incremental gear upgrades - spend your resources figuring out what you like (hands-on) and then do what it takes to acquire the necessary skills and gear. For me I don't really need flexibility or programmability or automation - I just want to consistently get the best results possible with a reasonable amount of time and effort. The Cuisinart grinder did that for me for a couple years, but because of my rising skill level, it is no longer suitable. It has become ugly, and as such must be relegated to storage. Good luck on your quest into the magical, hidden world of coffee! ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on January 5, 2015 by Dean Dicorcia

  • Excellent product
I bought one of Cuisinart’s burr grinders in 2002 at Sam’s Club. It was a workhorse for 21 years, but in January, the connector between the beans hopper and the collections container cracked and couldn’t be repaired. I was bereft; freshly ground beans are critical to a good brew. Fortunately, the product is still available! On January 15, I bought a “Renewed” grinder and it works great. Am looking forward to another 20+ years with this great machine. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on February 26, 2023 by Ann

  • Loud But Works Well
I needed a coffee grinder that could grind coarse coffee for making cold brew. This is adjustable so I can make it as coarse as I like and it works well. The grinds are mostly even, although there is a little bit of fine grounds produced no matter what you set your coarseness to be. However, the machine is LOUD and does not turn off when it is out of beans. I didn't expect it to be quiet, but it is definitely not something you want to do when people are sleeping. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on December 31, 2022 by Conner Panarella

  • Renewed
I was because it was used and a few scratches minor ding but it's work good ND very cool one! Changed my rating from 1 to 5 stars !
Reviewed in the United States on February 27, 2023 by Pizzetta

  • It grines coffee great.
I like it.
Reviewed in the United States on February 22, 2023 by Amazon Customer

  • Was great till I was introduced to a commercial grinder
I like this grinder a lot and has served me well for the last 8 months, but I came across a Grindmaster GCG-1 on c-list for $25. All I can say is although the Cuisinart is good for what it is and I’d still be using it, if it wasn’t for me getting this great deal on the commercial grinder. There is a huge difference between the consistency of the grind and flavor. (I really had no idea there would be this much of a difference or a difference at all) I can now tast the difference. The smaller grinder has a different taste being the beans get a little heated when grinded also they are not consistent in size. If u can hunt online for a used commercial unit, do it! If not this will do the job. Now when I grind beans my coffee tastes identical to D&D and taste exactly like my favorite deli (they sell me 5lb bags there) no matter what I did with the cuisinart I could not recreate the taste, actually I think it’s better at my house, because I use bottled water. I also use a commercial Bunn coffee maker (also a $30 c-list buy). Before I got into perfecting coffee, myself and everyone I know would make good coffee, but there is something about commercial equipment and a good consistent water, that crosses the line from a good home coffee making, to crossing into making coffee like a pro. Also if u hate the sound of a blender, then u will not like this machine it is loud and takes 3-4x’s as long to grind 1 1/2 ounces, the commercial unit does it in 4.1 seconds and its barely heard, commercial machines hummmm and at 4:30 in the morning that makes a huge difference! Overall for $30 I’d recommend it, its a heck of a lot better than buying preground coffee. Just let say, so u people don’t think I’m scuzzy and just buy used stuff and away I go. I spent about 3-3 1/2 hours disassembling scrubbing and disinfecting each machine so they were as clean as new before I used them, because I know a lot of people would be saying to themselves, I’d never buy used/dirty coffee machines. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on January 14, 2018 by James

Can't find a product?

Find it on Amazon first, then paste the link below.