Search  for anything...

Lomi 1 – 3L, Electric Composter (45 Cycles), World’s First Smart Waste Kitchen Bin That Turns Waste into Natural Fertilizer with a Single Button, Indoor Compost, Kitchen Food Recycler (White, Lomi 1)

  • Based on 1,158 reviews
Condition: New
Checking for product changes
$379.00 Why this price?

Buy Now, Pay Later


As low as / mo
  • – Up to 36-month term if approved
  • – 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, Afterpay, Apple Pay, and PayPal. No-credit-needed leasing options through Acima may also be available at checkout.

Learn more about financing & leasing here.

Selected Option

Free shipping on this product

30-day refund/replacement

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 Thursday, May 22
Order within 22 hours and 33 minutes
Available payment plans shown during checkout

Color: White


Size: Lomi Composter


Features

  • World's First Smart Waste Electric Composter: This electric composter for kitchen is the ultimate appliance for turning food and waste into nutrient-rich natural fertilizer. Best kitchen composter for your countertop.
  • Eco-Friendly: Turn your kitchen to a sustainable haven with Lomi! Effortlessly transform food waste into natural fertilizer in under 24 hours. Goodbye to waste guilt and hello to eco-friendly composter, all from the convenience of your countertop.
  • Easy Use: Lomi home composter machine is designed for indoor use, making it simple to waste food scraps on your countertop. Lomi features easy touch interface that allows you to start, stop, and monitor the composting process.
  • Reduce Your Carbon Footprint: Compared to disposing of your waste in a landfill, using this eclectic compost bin you can reduce your carbon footprint by up to 127%. We food cycle our food waste into plant food.
  • Compact Size: Small enough to put away, so beautiful you won't want to. This Lomi composter with 3L capacity is the perfect addition to any kitchen, allowing you to reduce your waste and feed your garden with ease.

Material: Polyurethane


Color: White


Capacity: 3 Liters


Product Dimensions: 20"L x 16"W x 14"H


Shape: Oval


Item Weight: 15 Pounds


UPC:


Manufacturer: Pela


Material: Polyurethane


Color: White


Capacity: 3 Liters


Product Dimensions: 20"L x 16"W x 14"H


Shape: Oval


Item Weight: 15 Pounds


UPC: 670462801004


Manufacturer: Pela


Item Weight: 15 pounds


Country of Origin: China


Item model number: Composter


Frequently asked questions

If you place your order now, the estimated arrival date for this product is: Thursday, 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
  • Afterpay Financing
  • PayTomorrow Financing
  • Financing through Apple Pay
Leasing options through Acima may also be available during checkout.

Learn more about financing & leasing here.

Top Amazon Reviews


  • Weird technology, but it works!
Color: White Size: Lomi Composter
First Impressions from a product engineer: - I had never heard of this technology so I was immediately fascinated by it - a way to help my immediate environment - Nice looking unit - Would be better if it was narrow fronted and deep as opposed to wide and shallow. Takes up more horizontal counter space the way it is - You have a live hinge on the back of the unit but wing nuts on the activated charcoal holder (back one). Design out the wing nuts, too small for many hands and easy to drop/lose - Initial setup - the bags of activated charcoal are too much for both holders so should be zip lock or just mention pour it into the back container and then the top one. It reads like one bag should go in the back and one bag should go in the top. Better yet just supply the charcoal in bags that fit the containers they go in - The manual says to unplug the unit to pull out the basket - this is very inconvenient. You should have a switch to prevent inadvertent operation with the lid off (if its not there) allowing the power to be plugged in while you are filling it. Actually I just ignore turning it off, it beeps at you when you pull the top off but that is fine. Now that I have used it for a few weeks: - Makes very nice organic laden dirt. I am not terribly scientific about what goes in, but what comes out looks good and my plants so far have liked it. - It's a bit louder than my dishwasher at about 55dBA, so I start it before I leave for work. It is not bad, I just have an incredibly quiet house so it is loud in comparison to other devices - it is nice to be able to clean the composting chamber in the dishwasher but the lid you cannot - it is not sealed and fills up with water. - you do have to slide it out from underneath the counter in order to pull out the basket or put larger amounts of waste in it, a slightly smaller chamber that is shorter or the chamber being in the front rather than the side would have improved loading. - My kitchen trash can no longer smells, and the Lomi does not either (unless you pull the lid off without processing the garbage) It's a keeper, and while it takes up a little more counter space than I would have liked, it does exactly what it is supposed to do and does it well. it appears to be well engineered and well made, so I hope future models take into account user's comments and suggestions. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on September 5, 2022 by John Hotchkiss John Hotchkiss

  • No odor
Color: White Size: Lomi Composter
This device is quiet and oderless. It is complicated reading all the directions, but once you do it once, it's easy. Photos in the instruction booklet or a link to some youtube videos would have been helpful. I initially put the activated charcoal in the cavities underneath the actual filter area. My first batch came out like fine tea, pretty dry. My daughter's batch she did when i visited, had a slight tropical scent and was more like soil. I'll put more liquid in mine next time. The unit is a bit big for the countertop, like a BIG bread machine, and, of course, the cord is short, so I have mine sitting on the floor near the plug. It's a great way to deal with kitchen waste, especially in winter or if you have limited yard space. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on February 1, 2023 by reygt reygt

  • No tech support
Color: White Size: Lomi Composter
Not quite 2 years from purchase and the machine runs for 5 minutes then shuts off. Tried to contact Lomi tech support 5 times and keep getting a message "tech support will contact you within 72 hours". It has been 3 weeks and they haven't contacted me. I asked for a shop manual and parts list so I could try to fix it myself but no response. I like the concept but this is a cheap, disposable piece of junk; buy a composter from a reputable vendor and hopefully the Lomi company will die a well deserved death. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on July 25, 2024 by Christopher J Heck

  • It works but your mulch depends on what you put into it.
Color: White Size: Lomi Composter
UPDATE: I have attached some photos showing the energy consumption and some final product. The power consumption is about 500 watts when it is running. A full batch of compost consumed just under 1 kWh of energy over about 14 hours. I turned about 3 - 4 quarts of rough product into about 2 to 3 cups of compost. Based on the fact that energy in my part of the US consists of roughly 37% coal, 25% natural gas, 30% wind, 3% hydroelectric, 4% solar, and 1% other, it is safe to predict that my carbon emissions was between 500g and 600g to produce the compost. FYI, it takes about 1.12 pounds of coal (1000g CO2), 7.36 cubic feet of natural gas (500g of CO2), or .08 gallons of oil (600-750g of CO2) to produce 1 kWh of energy. The estimated emissions of hydroelectric, wind, and solar is about 50g of CO2 emissions. It is easy to think your mulch is going to come out perfect every time if you read the writeup or watch the videos or commercials for this or similar products. I have made mulch in piles and portable rollers. Living in the cold, dry Rocky Mountain West, it is really difficult to make mulch in time to plant using standard methods. By the time your pile is really cooking, you are harvesting your July crops. The rollers are even more difficult because of how difficult it is to get a good mixture of green and brown media into the roller. Once again, in a cold, dry climate, you are harvesting before you get your first real batch of mulch. Enter the Lomi or similar products. It is part dehydrator, part composter, part grinder. The final result is a ground media / mulch hybrid. It handles egg shells and citrus peels far better than the outdoor pile in cold climates. It can break down pineapple cores, banana peels, and limited meat or fat trimmings. That is pretty impressive. If you get enough rotten, juicy produce mixed with the peels and other drier materials, you get pretty good product. If you are mostly dry, expect something that resembles pebbles cereal. If you are too wet, expect stinky, muddy sludge stuck to the pan. Get the mix just right, and you get decent mulch. Proper mulch should smell similar to soil. It should be loose, but you should have no problem packing it into a ball. Reading a few gardening books or a little Internet research will help you get the dry to wet mix better for your climate. Expect a trial and error learning curve. It is okay to mix too dry with too wet with close to right mulch. Nothing is not usable. Keep in mind that if you plan on using mulch in a garden do not put bones, produce stickers, compostable plastics, pet waste, sanitary waste, or other not truly compostable products in the Lomi. As a side note, stringy items like kale, spinach, flower stems, asparagus, and similar items need to be cut up or else they will bind up around the grinding mechanism. It is about the size of a bread machine. It uses a fair amount of energy.. You can hear it running. It is certainly louder than my 20 year old dishwasher or 10 year old refrigerator. You can smell it running. If you store media in it before running a batch, it can get pretty ripe. It is loud and smelly enough that I store it and run it in the garage. If you are sensitive to noise and / or smell, this is not a great countertop device so plan on storing it elsewhere. For convenience, I use a small covered waste can next to my trash can that I dump into the Lomi a few times per week. So far, no fruit flies, but it isn't summer yet either. Ultimately am I happy with it? The mulch that I have produced looks and feels pretty good. I will mix it with other mulch and renewed soil this summer to see how well it works in my vegetable garden. I like the idea of taking my egg shells, juicer waste, vegetable trimmings, tea bags, coffee & filters, rotten veggies, and other compostable waste and putting it into my garden instead of a landfill. I like the idea of producing a batch regardless of it being below zero outside or 100 degrees outside. I don't believe I am saving the world with it, but I hope it will make my garden better. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on May 6, 2023 by Amazon Customer Amazon Customer

Can't find a product?

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