Picking a countertop oven means weighing cooking power against counter space and price, and the right choice depends entirely on how you actually cook. We dug through spec sheets and real owner feedback to land on five standouts: our Best Overall pick, a no-frills Best Budget option, a fold-away Best Space-Saving Combo for tight kitchens, a roomy Best for Baking pick for serious bakers, and a premium Best Splurge for buyers who want the best convection performance available. The Breville Smart Oven Pro came out on top, but it is not the right call for every kitchen. Read on to see which of these five actually fits how you cook.
| Product | Cooking Performance | Capacity | Ease Of Use | Value | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
![]() Best OverallBreville Smart Oven Pro | 9.0 | 8.5 | 8.5 | 7.5 | See PriceAmazon |
![]() Best BudgetBLACK+DECKER TO1313SBD Toaster Oven | 6.0 | 5.5 | 8.0 | 9.5 | See PriceAmazon |
![]() Best Space-Saving ComboNinja Foodi Flip Toaster Oven Air Fryer Combo | 8.0 | 7.5 | 8.0 | 8.5 | See PriceAmazon |
![]() Best for BakingDe'Longhi Livenza 9-in-1 Air Fry Convection Oven | 8.0 | 8.5 | 7.5 | 7.0 | See PriceAmazon |
![]() Best SplurgeCafe Couture Oven | 9.0 | 9.0 | 8.5 | 6.0 | See PriceAmazon |

The Breville Smart Oven Pro is for home cooks who bake, roast, and reheat often enough that a countertop oven needs to behave like a real oven, not a glorified toaster. Its 13.5 by 11.5 by 5.5 inch interior and 10 cooking functions handle a 13 inch pizza, a 9 cup muffin tray, or a 4.4 quart Dutch oven for slow cooking, which the compact BLACK+DECKER simply cannot fit. If your priority is saving every inch of counter space instead, the flip away Ninja Foodi is the smarter buy, and you would regret the Breville's larger permanent footprint.
The Element iQ System uses five independent quartz elements that shift power to where the food actually needs it, and that precision shows up in more even bakes than the single fan convection setup in the De'Longhi Livenza. Ten cooking functions, including a genuine slow cook mode that runs up to 10 hours, cover far more ground than the four basic functions on the BLACK+DECKER. The 1800 watt element gets to temperature fast, and the interior light plus LCD countdown take the guesswork out of knowing when food is actually done. It is not the cheapest option on this list, but it earns its price with a 4.6 star rating across more than 11,000 reviews.
Yes, if you want one countertop oven that can realistically replace your full-sized oven for daily use. The main trade-off is price and footprint: if you have limited counter space, look at the Ninja Foodi instead, and if budget is the deciding factor, the BLACK+DECKER covers basic toasting for a fraction of the cost.

The BLACK+DECKER Toaster Oven is for buyers who just want dependable basic toasting without paying for extra features, the kind of appliance you set on the counter and forget about. Owners of this budget tier routinely report eight or more years of daily use, which says more about real world reliability than any spec sheet. If you actually want air frying or convection baking, the low price stops making sense, and you would regret it: look at the Ninja Foodi instead.
This oven does one thing, basic toasting, baking, and broiling, and does it without fuss. Four straightforward functions and a 30 minute timer with a stay on option cover the essentials. Owners consistently describe budget models like this one as cheap but surprisingly durable, with several reports of eight plus years of daily use. It fits a 9 inch pizza or four slices of bread, a fraction of the 13 inch pizza capacity in the Breville, but that is the trade-off for a price under $60. The build quality is basic, so do not expect the sturdiness of the Cafe Couture.
Yes, if dependable basic toasting is genuinely all you need and you would rather not pay for functions you will not use. The trade-off is real: no convection or air fry, and a noticeably smaller interior, so if you cook full meals regularly, step up to the Ninja Foodi instead.

The Ninja Foodi Combo is for small kitchen owners who want toasting, air frying, and full meals from one flip away unit that does not eat up permanent counter space. It flips up and stores flat against the backsplash, reclaiming about half the counter footprint the Breville or De'Longhi would demand full time. If a dedicated air fryer is non negotiable for you, know that combo units like this one can carry over air fried smells into your toast, and you might prefer keeping functions separate.
Owners consistently say this oven has fully replaced their regular oven, handling toast, air frying, and family sized meals without complaint. The flip up and away design is the standout feature here: nothing else on this list saves counter space the way it does, not even the compact BLACK+DECKER. Eight cooking functions and six infrared heating elements give it real versatility, and it can air fry or roast up to 4 pounds of food while toasting six slices of bread, more capacity than the BLACK+DECKER's 9 inch pizza limit. The one consistent complaint is that air fried smells can linger and transfer to toast, a quirk of combining functions in one cavity.
Yes, if counter space is tight and you want one appliance that genuinely replaces both a toaster oven and an air fryer. The trade-off is potential flavor transfer between functions, so if you toast daily and air fry often, weigh that against the extra capacity you would get from the De'Longhi.

The De'Longhi Livenza is for home bakers who need a larger interior with room for bread, baking stones, and even a dutch oven, not just weeknight reheating. The 14 liter cavity and 1800 watt power convection system are built around genuine baking and roasting, not just toast. If space saving matters more to you than baking depth, the flip away Ninja Foodi fits a smaller kitchen better, and you would regret the Livenza's larger permanent footprint.
The power convection system pairs precise heating elements with a fan that circulates hot air evenly, and De'Longhi backs it with a heat lock system that keeps up to 30 percent more heat inside rather than escaping through the glass door. Nine presets take the guesswork out of everything from pizza to cookies, and it preheats up to 60 percent faster than a full size range oven. Its interior comfortably outsizes the BLACK+DECKER's 9 inch pizza limit, fitting a whole chicken alongside sheet pan bakes. It runs cooler on the outside than most convection ovens in its class, a genuine advantage over the Breville if counter heat buildup is a concern in a small kitchen.
Yes, if baking capacity and even heat distribution matter more to you than saving counter space or money. It costs more than the Ninja Foodi and takes up more permanent room, so if your kitchen is tight, the Ninja is the better fit.

The Cafe Couture Oven is for buyers who want a buy-it-for-life countertop oven and are willing to pay a premium for top tier convection performance and smart features. Fourteen cooking modes, from proofing dough at 80 degrees to air frying at 450 degrees, cover more ground than any other pick here, including the 10 functions on the Breville. If $420 is more than you want to spend on a countertop appliance, the Breville delivers most of the same daily performance for roughly $150 less, and most buyers would not regret the difference.
Six total heating elements and WiFi connectivity let you start and monitor cooking remotely through the SmartHQ app, or hand it off to Alexa or Google Home entirely, a level of control none of the other picks offer. The cavity fits a 12 inch pizza, a 9 by 13 cake pan, and multiple casserole dishes at once, edging out the capacity of the Breville's 13 inch pizza slot. CrispFinish mode adds a dedicated browning pass on top of the standard 14 cooking modes, useful for anyone chasing restaurant style results at home. It is the most expensive oven on this list by a wide margin, and the reviews, while solid at 4.2 stars, come from a smaller sample than the Breville's.
Yes, if you want the most capable countertop oven available and price is not the deciding factor. For most buyers the extra cost over the Breville buys smart features more than dramatically better cooking, so if WiFi control and CrispFinish are not must haves, save the money and go with the Breville instead.
This is the most frequently recommended Breville alternative among owners, praised for strong toasting performance and accessible control knobs, with some units still going strong after nearly 15 years.
See PriceAmazonOwners report trouble free daily use despite mixed online reviews, though most recommend skipping the nonstick pan it ships with.
See PriceAmazonEight separate heating elements give it unusually even heat, though it skips the convection fan found on most competitors.
See PriceAmazon
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