

☕ Elevate your coffee game—because your mornings deserve the best!
The Ninja 12-Cup Programmable Coffee Brewer combines advanced hotter brewing technology with versatile 2-style brewing (Classic or Rich) and a large 60oz removable water reservoir. Its programmable 24-hour delay, adjustable warming plate, and small batch function deliver fresh, flavorful coffee tailored to your schedule and taste. Designed for convenience and durability, it includes a reusable filter, mid-brew pause, and easy cleaning features, making it a top choice for coffee lovers seeking quality and control.













| ASIN | B07S98411N |
| Best Sellers Rank | #1,882 in Home & Kitchen ( See Top 100 in Home & Kitchen ) #6 in Coffee Machines |
| Brand | Ninja |
| Brand Name | Ninja |
| Capacity | 3.8 Pounds |
| Coffee Maker Type | Drip Coffee Machine |
| Color | Stainless Steel |
| Customer Reviews | 4.4 out of 5 stars 27,779 Reviews |
| Filter Type | Reusable |
| Global Trade Identification Number | 00622356559225, 10622356559222 |
| Human Interface Input | Buttons |
| Included Components | Carafe, Filter, Ninja Integrated Scoop, Ninja Programmable Coffee Brewer, Removable Water Reservoir |
| Item Dimensions D x W x H | 8"D x 10"W x 14"H |
| Item Type Name | with 12-cup Glass Carafe, Black and Stainless Steel Finish |
| Item Weight | 6.55 Pounds |
| Manufacturer | SharkNinja |
| Material | Glass, Plastic |
| Model Name | Ninja CE251 Coffee Programmable Brewer |
| Model Number | CE251 |
| Number of Items | 1 |
| Operation Mode | Fully Automatic |
| Other Special Features of the Product | Programmable, Removable Tank |
| Product Dimensions | 8"D x 10"W x 14"H |
| Recommended Uses For Product | Camping |
| Special Feature | Programmable, Removable Tank |
| Specific Uses For Product | Espresso |
| Style | Stainless Steel, 14-Cup |
| UPC | 622356559225 |
| Unit Count | 1.0 Count |
| Voltage | 110 Volts |
| Warranty Description | 1 Year Limited Warranty |
| Wattage | 1100 watts |
B**R
Great coffeemaker, gets the water hot enough, easy to use, and still going after four years
A great coffeemaker. It does everything you need it to do, works dependably and - most importantly - gets the water hot enough to make actual good coffee. It's as good as my Melitta pour-over, which I used for years. The water carafe can be a bit awkward to fill all the way, but it doesn't spill if you use the top to carry it between the sink and the coffeemaker. After we got the right amount of coffee for us (9 scoops, using the measure that comes with the pot) we've been set for years. Unless you have truly delicate taste buds - or, more likely, are a complete coffee snob - the Ninja is all you need.
H**R
Great quality for the price!
I never knew what a difference a coffee maker makes for a good cup of coffee. This coffee maker turns our normal coffee into stellar coffee. Easy to use. Easy to program. Reasonable price. Love the additional features - extended burner time, brew strength options, self clean. Feels like it is made of high quality components. I hope it lasts longer than the other brands we've bought. Very pleased with performance so far!
S**R
BEST coffee maker I have ever owned!
I have had this Ninja for several months now and I LOVE this coffee maker so much that I’m writing a review, which I don’t normally do. I have been through several coffee makers, including, Cuisinart 14-Cup Coffee Maker, that just I threw out, ultimately because the design of the machine. Many times I was cleaning up messes, either water, coffee grounds or leaked coffee. My countered was stained due to the malfunctioning makers. But this Ninja coffee maker? It is clean, efficient, easy use, has all of bells and whistles I need (including delayed brewing and up to 4 hours warming setting) and makes great coffee! Don’t be fooled by the exterior water container…. It looks different but is a life saver! Easy to fill and clean! I just wish they’d make this into a 14 Cup machine so my whole family could enjoy it in one run! 😄
M**E
Best tasting coffee ever from this coffee maker
This is an excellent coffee maker. Reasons: Well made, simple to use, convenient and removable water reserve, carafe that doesn't drip, brewing light pulses to let you know it's brewing, beeps when done, simple delayed brewing, small batch mode for up to 4 cups (other coffee makers will make EXTREMELY weak coffee if you only make up to 4 cups) and most important, the automatic pre-infusion cycle wets the coffee grounds and then pauses for a little bit to allow the grounds to soak up the hot water and THEN continue the brewing process. This takes a little longer, so a 12 cup carafe takes 10-12'ish minutes, but in my opinion it's WELL worth it. I drink my coffee black, so there's no place for bad coffee to hide. Take it from me, if you start with quality coffee and use filtered/bottled/clean water, this unit makes fantastic coffee! Best ever.
T**.
Drip
. I searched for a long time for a machine Apparently, no drip is great. I looked at the most expensive, top names, went through all the reviews, and all of them were terrible. Of course some people loved them. So it’s what kept me from buying an overpriced coffee maker that I would find mediocre. I’m a coffee snob. I use French press, being my favorite, have the chimex pour over, and percolator. Now the percolator makes pretty good coffee and I have a big one. Just takes a long time. I have a Moka pot too. Which I love. I drink a lot of coffee and the others were just getting to be a pain to clean. They are actually extremely easily but some days I just want to press a button. Or wake up and coffee made so I’m not running around like a psycho getting my kid to school. So, I love my coffee. It came quick, easy to take out, set up. Cleaned the water base with soap, water, rag like it says. Then ran a cycle of water. Someone complained how long this took to make. It brews pretty fast. My single keireg takes longer and drips all over 🙃. So I make my first pot. The small one. I’m not sure if the robust button works The light didn’t seem to go on when I pressed it messing around. That will be what I use. So I made a classic small cup. It’s ok. But I’m also not used to machine. But I do use kuereg. I’d say probably the same. It’s not bad. I hate that all coffee makers are all made with plastic. Even the ones that say they don’t. There is plastic somewhere in there. Maybe less. Tomorrow I’m goin to try the stringer brew. So I will be updating the difference. If it’s so so, then I may just make a moka pot daily, and just pour that in for more volume and flavor. I think if you like pour over coffee you may like this more than me. Tastes closer to that than my French press or moka. Maybe the same as my kerug. I’ll update tomorrow Update: I went to 4 stars. I used the rich button to brew. It was nice to have it ready in the am. I must say this makes a pretty good cup of coffee. The temperature of coffee is perfect. Definitely better than kuerig. Pods are terrible. Even if I use my own coffee with reusable cup. So being a person that uses French press, moka pot, also percolator. I’ve done pour over also. French press being my favorite along moka pot. Nothing can beat making coffee that way. It will always be better. So for that reason only I take a star off. This is a good drip machine. I’m happy I didn’t waste money on an expensive machine. I read review after review. And since nothing will ever compare to making it the old school way, this machine does a great job. An espresso machine may be a good buy. But I wanted a drip machine that I can program the night before and didn’t need much cleaning after bc I drink a lot of coffee. Not that it’s difficult rinsing the others out. But I’m lazy sometimes. So I’m definitely a coffee snob. Every machine even the expensive ones have plastic parts. So I’m happy with this purchase. I’m hoping it lasts, so when issues come up I will edit. I would like to get a good 10 years if not more out of this machine. I prefer to never have to buy one ever again. But things are made to not last unfortunately. So I expect this to last at least 10. It’s not asking much. So will see
H**R
Huge upgrade from a Cuisinart
We were devoted to the Cuisinart brand for a longtime, but finally realized their products were getting too cheap and crappy and we were going through them every other year. Decided to give this one a try and we've been very happy with it! It's simple to use and a really nice, compact size for the countertop. We like the option to brew a classic or bold style brew. There's a coffee scoop that attaches to the side, which is a nice feature. It also has a small batch (1-4c) option that allows you to make a single cup without having a big K-cup style component on the side of the machine. The other thing we really like is the detachable water reservoir so you can fill that directly at the sink instead of having to pour water into the top of the machine like our old Cuisinart one. If I was being picky, the two pitfalls of this machine are: #1 the coffee scoop is the equivalent of 1 cup of coffee, so if you're doing a full batch you have to do 12 scoops. Wish it was bigger so the scoop was the equivalent of 2 cups of coffee, meaning for a full pot you only have to measure out 6 scoops instead of 12. #2 when you fill the reservoir for a full batch of coffee (12c) the water is basically at the top edge of the reservoir. Just makes for a precarious walk from sink back to coffee machine. We've spilled a bunch. Again, these are nitpicks, but I know people like to hear all the details. Would hands down recommend this coffee machine to anyone.
A**C
Amazing cup of coffee made at home !
This makes the BEST cup of coffee - I had no idea how bad my homemade coffee was until I got this! I use brita water as suggested and like strong coffee and this delivers. I was desperate as my old black and decker had a crumbling hot plate and the lid broke and they sent a replacement lid that didn’t fit 💩 It was less than a year old and not great don’t recommend black and decker at all. I love my ninja blender so went for the coffee maker. I’m so glad I did. It takes about 15 mins to brew but I set it the night before and the sound isn’t too loud. I don’t like the beeping when it’s done as I go to work before 5am but it hasn’t woken my family up yet! So worth it and it comes with a measuring spoon that rests on the side of the machine and a reusable cone basket so you don’t need to buy a new one. Highly recommend for a great cuppa! It’s now on sale for $70 I paid $89 and it’s worth it ☕️ great looking fits under the cabinets (although to not have the steam hit the cabinets I pull it out slightly when brewing.
E**E
Clear, detachable reservoir separates this coffee maker from the masses.
I've owned this coffee maker over a month now and love it. Intuitive-to-operate controls and a very attractive appearance are among its virtues. Of course, hot water dripping over coffee grinds isn't rocket science and is something most coffee makers do comparably well, and the Ninja likewise makes excellent-tasting coffee. Other reviews were mildly critical of the "sneak a cup" functionality, but I've found it on par with that of my last two coffee makers (Krups and Cuisinart). Yes, a couple of drops of coffee will still splash on the hot plate while you pull the carafe out, but I've never used or seen a pot yet that didn't do that, and the spring mechanism on this carafe is at least as robust as any I've seen on other coffee makers. Where this pot really shines is in the clear, detachable water reservoir. That obviously offers you the (completely?) unique option of detaching the tank to fill it over the sink before brewing, which I've done a few times and anticipated doing regularly. Frankly, however, I find it unnecessary because the reservoir itself provides an unusually large opening/target for pouring directly from my filtered water pitcher. But there are other benefits to the reservoir design, including the fact that it allows you to easily monitor the conditions inside . . . i.e., when the moist environment inevitably leads to mildew, you will know it (and, because the reservoir is transparent to any ambient sunlight, mold/mildew should theoretically take longer to manifest in many kitchens.) More importantly, you'll be able to easily clean the reservoir in a sink of hot soapy water (with a little bleach) without repeated electric cleaning and rinse cycles for the whole brewer, followed by awkward attempts to wipe the nooks and crannies of the integral, typically black reservoir with a white paper towel to see if any undesirable residues remain. But perhaps the greatest advantage of this design is in what it will save you if you should *ahem* forget to put your carafe in place before you hit "brew." I've only done this twice in my life but, ironically, both times occurred within the last six weeks: once with my last Krups pot and once with this new Ninja. (Put aside for the moment what such forgetfulness might be saying about me.:-) At the very least, I gained valuable, first-hand experience in how the Ninja's design saved my a$$ while the typical integral design on the Krups resulted in a ruined coffee maker, which prompted my purchase of the Ninja in the first place.) When you fail to put the carafe under the filter spout on a coffee maker that offers the increasingly ubiquitous "sneak a cup" feature, the spring mechanism on the filter holder is never engaged and the water that's dripping down over your grinds to make coffee is never given proper egress below. So your mistake may go unnoticed for quite some time since you won't hear the kind of gushing and sizzling sound that an older model without the sneak a cup feature would produce when dripping coffee is merrily dispensing and burning on the naked hotplate below. Instead, the water stays in the filter holder, eventually having nowhere to go but over the sides, which, on the vast majority of drip coffee makers, means that the brewed coffee--complete with floating grinds--will spill over and back into the reservoir itself. That is exactly what happened to my Krups, and, despite hours of repeated cleaning cycles and an aborted effort to dismantle the innards, I realized the pot was shot (no pun intended) and would never process water properly through its (clogged) pump pathway again. Enter the Ninja. After making delicious coffee for a week or so, I, once again, got distracted by something (probably my Yorkie yapping to get out for a morning pee) and neglected to actually seat the carafe on the coffee maker before hitting brew. When I got back in, I noticed the problem just before the brewing coffee was about to overflow the filter holder. The difference was, even had I been a bit later, I would have only had to deal with a messy countertop and not a ruined $80+ coffee maker. In other words, if the Ninja coffee filter overflows, the brewed coffee will NOT go back into the reservoir because the latter is physically higher and isolated from the former in a way that would not permit that. So, should you repeat my negligence, you will hear coffee suddenly dripping on your hotplate and counter top, but you won't have to buy a new coffee maker. The only "negative" to the pot is that the carafe lid does not flip up via the common thumb depression above the handle. You have to slide/turn it to remove, which is more easily done with two hands. But this is a very, very minor ding in my view and not worth deducting a star for an otherwise very well-designed, highly practical, and elegant-looking appliance.
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