If you've ever fished a single measuring cup out of a cluttered drawer while your batter threatens to overmix, you know the appeal of a nested set. The KitchenAid Aqua Sky measuring cups promise both form and function—but do they deliver on the counter as well as they do in the box? We put four weeks of daily baking and cooking through these cups to find out.
Quick verdict
The Aqua Sky cups nest cleanly, measure accurately, and look sharp next to any KitchenAid appliance in that matching colorway. They work well for everyday home cooking, though the lack of handles means you grip the cup body directly. They are not the right choice for professional kitchens or for anyone who needs the largest measuring cup to exceed 1 cup. Check the latest price for the KitchenAid Aqua Sky set on Amazon
Who is this for?
These cups target home cooks who want kitchen tools that perform reliably and look good doing it. If your countertop mixer is already KitchenAid Aqua Sky, these cups extend that aesthetic into your drawer with no visual clash. The set works for anyone who measures wet and dry ingredients interchangeably and needs a set that stays organized without effort. Small kitchens benefit most from the nesting design—it clears drawer space without sacrificing any of the four standard cup sizes. That said, if you regularly bake in large batches or need to measure more than 1 cup of any single ingredient at once, you will need a separate larger set.
Key features
Four-piece nested set with snap ring
The set includes 1/4, 1/3, 1/2, and 1-cup sizes. They nest into a single compact stack and the included snap ring holds them together in the drawer. No more hunting for the half-cup buried under the one-cup. The ring unsnaps for loading and snaps back for storage. If you have ever opened a drawer to find all four cups scattered in different directions, this alone justifies the upgrade.
Dual-unit markings
Measurements appear in both standard US cups and milliliters. Every line is printed clearly on the interior surface. We tested this during a week of recipe testing that required both metric and imperial conversions—the markings stayed legible throughout, even after the cups went through the dishwasher repeatedly. You do not have to guess which line is the half-cup or worry about faded markings after a few months of use.
Wet and dry versatility
The glass-and-plastic construction handles both wet batters and dry ingredients without clinging or static issues. Flour poured cleanly without sticking to the interior walls. Oil and thin liquids poured without pooling along the rim. Honey required a brief soak but no more than any other cup material would demand.
Aqua Sky color matching
KitchenAid's Aqua Sky is a medium teal that coordinates directly with the brand's signature artisan line appliances. If you own a stand mixer, food processor, or espresso machine in this color, these cups pull the look together consistently. The color holds well on the exterior glass shell. Interior markings are printed, not etched, so they will not fade unevenly—but they also will not last as long as etched lines would.
Dishwasher safe construction
The two-piece construction—glass inner shell and plastic outer shell—separates for thorough cleaning if needed. Most mornings, a quick dishwasher cycle handled everything. For sticky ingredients like honey or thick pancake batter, a brief warm-water soak first prevented any residue from baking on.
Real-world performance
Over four weeks, we used these cups for morning pancakes, weekend baking, and weeknight marinades. The 1/4-cup handled vanilla extract and food coloring without spillage. The 1/3-cup measured peanut butter for satay sauce cleanly. The 1/2-cup portioned soy sauce and rice vinegar with no drips. The 1-cup measured both flour for sourdough starter and olive oil for salad dressing without any accuracy complaints.
The lack of handles is the most noticeable design trade-off. You grip the cup body directly, which works fine for lightweight ingredients and short sessions. After measuring five or six ingredients in a row—wet and dry—that grip adds up. If you have larger hands or reduced grip strength, this is worth considering before purchase. The 1/4-cup in particular requires a precise grip to avoid tipping when you scrape across the top with a straight edge.
Accuracy held up across repeated uses. We measured 1 cup of water three times with the one-cup measure and got consistent results. Flour compaction varied as it does with any cup measure, but the lines themselves are clear enough to read before you level the top. The printed markings survived twenty dishwasher cycles with no fading we could detect.
Pros and cons
See the structured breakdown in the right rail. The short version: these cups nest neatly, match KitchenAid appliances, and measure wet and dry ingredients without fuss. They lack handles, cap at 1 cup, and the printed markings will not last forever.
Verdict & price check
The KitchenAid Aqua Sky measuring cups earn their spot in a home kitchen that already leans toward the KitchenAid aesthetic. The nesting design solves the drawer clutter problem genuinely well, and the dual-unit markings serve both metric and imperial cooks without compromise. They are not built for professional volume or for cooks who need a 2-cup or larger measure in the same set.
If the Aqua Sky color fits your kitchen, find the current price for the KitchenAid measuring cups set on Amazon before you buy. They sit at a mid-range price point compared to generic glass sets and outperform most plastic alternatives in durability and measurement clarity.

