Pre-ground coffee is a gamble. You either get stale grounds or a grind size that fights your brewing method. The SHARDOR Burr Coffee Grinder promises to fix both problems with 32 grind settings and a digital timer that takes the math out of your morning routine. I ran it through six weeks of espresso pulls, pour-overs, and French press batches to see if it earns the counter space.
Quick verdict
The SHARDOR covers the full grind spectrum—from Turkish fine to French press coarse—without the intimidating learning curve of commercial grinders. The electronic timer is the real win: dial in 15 seconds for espresso, 25 for drip, and forget the guesswork. The 120-second safety cutoff requires smaller batches than some competitors, which is a minor inconvenience for high-volume users. For home brewers who want consistency without spending $300+, this is the grinder to beat.
Who is this for?
This grinder targets the home cook who makes coffee as a daily ritual, not a hobby. If you switch between brewing methods—espresso in the morning, French press on weekends—the 32 settings cover your range without a second appliance. It's also a fit for beginners who want to experiment with grind size but don't want to manually time each session. If you're pulling professional-grade espresso shots or grinding for a café, look at step-up models with more powerful motors and stepless adjustments.
Key features
Metal flat burr construction
The SHARDOR uses a metal flat burr set instead of blade grinding, which produces consistent particle size and preserves more flavor oils. Blade grinders create dust and boulders; this design keeps your grounds uniform across the full range. The burrs are removable for deep cleaning, which you'll want to do every couple of weeks if you're grinding daily.
32 grind size settings
A numbered dial runs from 1 (finest) to 32 (coarsest), covering espresso, AeroPress, drip, Chemex, and French press in one device. The numbers don't correspond to specific brew methods, so you'll need to experiment once—but the range is genuinely wide. Most budget grinders offer 10-15 settings; 32 gives you room to fine-tune for your specific beans and taste.
Adjustable 40-second electronic timer
The digital timer is the standout convenience. Twist the dial to set grinding time up to 40 seconds, press start, and walk away. This eliminates the hand-holding required by pulse-only grinders. For reference, 12-15 seconds yields about 14-16 grams of espresso grounds; 20-25 seconds produces roughly 30 grams for two pour-over cups. The timer is adjustable in 1-second increments via a small dial, letting you dial in your exact yield.
Compact design
At roughly 8 inches tall and 5 inches wide, the SHARDOR fits under upper cabinets and beside small brewers like the AeroPress or V60. The bean hopper holds 6 ounces—enough for a few days of daily brewing. The grounds chamber sits below the burr and removes for dumping and brushing. The overall footprint is smaller than the Encore and far smaller than flat-burr commercial units.
Safety and motor protection
The built-in 120-second safety cutoff is worth knowing. If you grind continuously past two minutes, the motor rests automatically. For typical use—grinding 20-30 seconds at a time—this never triggers. It only matters if you're grinding large batches at once. The manual recommends smaller batches for best performance, which aligns with best practices for any burr grinder in this price range.
Real-world performance
In testing, the SHARDOR performed reliably across methods. Espresso shots at setting 5-7 pulled in 25-28 seconds with good extraction and crema. Pour-over at settings 15-18 produced a clean, bright cup with no muddiness. French press at 28-32 steeped well with no fine sediment in the cup. The timer accuracy held up over six weeks—grinding the same time each morning produced consistent doses without weighing every batch.
The grounds chamber cleaning button is a practical touch. Press it to spin the burr briefly without beans, which blows loose grounds into the chamber for easier brushing. Combined with the included small brush and removable burr, basic maintenance takes under two minutes. The removable upper burr comes off with a quarter-turn, exposing the grinding chamber for full access.
Noise falls in the typical range for electric burr grinders—not whisper-quiet, but not startling. At roughly 65-70 dB, it's comparable to the Cuisinart DBM-8 and quieter than some blade grinders under load. If you grind before sunrise, you'll hear it through a closed door, but it's not jarring.
Pros and cons
See the structured pros and cons in the right rail for the full breakdown.
Verdict & price check
The SHARDOR Burr Coffee Grinder delivers consistent grounds across a wider grind range than most competitors at this price, and the electronic timer removes the guesswork from dosing. The motor protection and compact design are practical wins for daily home use. If you're grinding for more than two people daily or need commercial-grade throughput, look elsewhere. For everyone else, this is a reliable, versatile grinder that earns its spot on the counter. Check the latest price for the SHARDOR Burr Coffee Grinder on Amazon.

