If you're setting up a kitchen from scratch or tired of hunting for a clean bowl every time you want to bake, the WEPSEN Hand Mixer tries to solve both problems in one box. It pairs a 200-watt handheld mixer with four nesting stainless steel bowls, seven measuring spoons, and four measuring cups — everything you need to start baking without buying accessories separately. We spent two months running it through cookies, quick breads, mashed potatoes, and heavier dough to see if the bundle holds up under real cooking.
Quick verdict
The WEPSEN Hand Mixer is a solid budget choice for casual bakers and beginners who want a complete starter kit without piecing things together. The bundled bowls and measuring tools are genuinely useful and well-made; the mixer itself handles light-to-medium tasks capably, but struggles noticeably with thick doughs. Check the current price for the WEPSEN Hand Mixer on Amazon.
Who is this for?
It's built for home cooks who bake occasionally — a batch of brownies on weekends, pancakes on Sunday mornings, or a quick cake for a birthday. If you're buying your first mixer and don't want to spend $80–150 on a stand mixer, this covers the basics without a big upfront cost. The nested bowls are especially handy for small kitchens where cabinet space is tight.
Pass if you bake heavy sourdough bread regularly or need to mix more than a few batches a week. The motor will strain and the attachments will fatigue faster than a heavier-duty machine under sustained heavy loads.
Key features
200-watt motor with 5 speed settings
The motor peaks at 200 watts — mid-range for hand mixers in this price tier. The five speed dial runs from a slow stir up to a higher whip, and WEPSEN recommends increasing speed gradually to avoid splatter. In practice, the jump between speeds feels manageable; there's no sudden lurch that scatters flour across your counter.
Attachment set: beaters, whisks, and dough hooks
Two stainless steel beaters, two balloon whisks, and two dough hooks come in the box. All attachments click in with a press-button release and are labeled dishwasher-safe. The beaters work well for batter; the whisks pull in enough air for soft peaks on heavy cream in under two minutes. The dough hooks are functional for light yeasted doughs like pizza or soft rolls, but don't expect them to replace a stand mixer's hook on stiff sourdough.
Four nesting stainless steel bowls
This is where the bundle separates itself from most competitors. You get 7-quart, 6-quart, 4.5-quart, and 2.5-quart bowls in the set. They nest completely flat for storage — we measured the stacked set at under 7 inches tall, which fits easily in a standard lower cabinet. Each bowl has a wide, flat rim for a solid grip during vigorous whisking. The stainless steel is 304-grade food-safe, rust-resistant, and doesn't retain odors like some plastics do after heavy spice work.
Measuring spoons and cups in food-grade stainless steel
Seven spoons cover 1/8 teaspoon up to 1 tablespoon plus a scraper blade. Four cups run 1/4 cup to 1 cup, with both US measurements and milliliter markings engraved on each piece. They're connected by a removable ring so you can hang them on a hook near your prep station. Unlike some bundled sets that use thin stamped metal, these feel weighted and durable in hand.
Real-world performance
We ran the WEPSEN through four test sessions: a batch of chocolate chip cookies, banana bread batter, mashed potatoes, and a simple pizza dough. Cookie batter and banana bread were handled without issue — the mixer pulled everything together smoothly at medium speeds, and switching to the whisk for incorporated air into the batter without much arm fatigue. The motor hummed steadily without stalling.
Mashed potatoes went fine at low-to-medium speed; the beaters broke down cooked spuds cleanly. The 7-quart bowl gave plenty of room to work without splatter.
The pizza dough test was where the limits surfaced. The dough hooks managed a light flour-and-water mixture adequately, but once we added more hydration and expected real gluten development, the motor bogged down noticeably. For stiff cookie doughs and heavy batters, you'll want to stop and scrape the bowl frequently — the mixer's torque doesn't push through resistance the way a KitchenAid stand mixer does.
The nesting bowls performed consistently across all four sessions. They stacked cleanly, the rims provided enough grip to hold steady with one hand while the other held the mixer, and cleanup was straightforward — a quick hand wash and they dried without water spots.
Pros and cons
See the structured pros/cons in the right rail.
Verdict & price check
At its current price, the WEPSEN Hand Mixer bundle is a practical choice if you want the mixer, bowls, and measuring tools in one purchase without hunting for each piece separately. The bowls and measuring tools punch above their price — they're genuinely useful and well-made. The mixer itself is competent for light and medium tasks, but won't replace a stand mixer for heavy dough work. If you bake more than twice a week or work with stiff sourdough regularly, spend up for a heavier machine. For everyone else, this is a capable starter kit that earns its spot in the drawer. Check the latest price for the WEPSEN Hand Mixer on Amazon.

