All small appliance brands
FixMyKitchen tracks 16 manufacturers of small kitchen appliances, from household names like KitchenAid and Cuisinart to budget specialists like Black+Decker and Hamilton Beach. Pick a brand below to see every manual we have indexed for their lineup, organized by appliance type.
Long-running American brand best known for power tools but with a deep small-appliance lineup of toaster ovens, drip cof…
German design-led brand whose hand blenders, food processors, and citrus juicers are mainstays of European kitchens and …
Australian engineering-driven brand that competes at the higher end of the small-appliance market. Best known for the Ba…
U.S. brand that effectively invented the home food processor in 1973 and now spans the small-appliance counter — drip co…
Italian appliance maker known for super-automatic espresso machines, Nespresso-licensed pod machines, and the Dedica sli…
American small-appliance maker founded in 1910, best known for affordable, durable countertop blenders, drip coffee make…
Hamilton Beach's commercial-grade line, designed for cafes and small food-service operations. Spec'd for higher duty cyc…
Canadian-founded brand that built the modern multi-function pressure cooker into a category. The product line now extend…
Vermont-born single-serve pod coffee brand that defined the category in North America. Manuals focus on the puncture-nee…
Subsidiary of Whirlpool, famous for the bowl-lift stand mixer that's been in continuous production since 1919 in nearly …
German appliance brand owned by Groupe SEB, with strong distribution in espresso machines, electric kettles, and food pr…
American drip-coffee brand launched in 1972 — credited with bringing automatic drip brewing into U.S. kitchens. Today th…
Nestlé-owned single-serve espresso pod system with machines manufactured under license by De'Longhi, Krups, and Breville…
SharkNinja-owned brand that helped create the personal-blender category and now dominates U.S. air-fryer sales with the …
American brand that introduced the original Osterizer countertop blender in 1946. Today the lineup spans blenders, drip …
Family-owned Ohio company specializing in high-power performance blenders sold to both home and commercial buyers. The a…
How brands are organized
Each brand page on FixMyKitchen lists every manual we have ingested for that manufacturer, grouped by appliance category. So a brand like Cuisinart will be split into separate sections for coffee makers, blenders, toasters, food processors, and so on — making it easy to scan for the exact product line you own without scrolling past unrelated SKUs.
Where a brand has been acquired, renamed, or merged with another company, we still keep their manuals under the original brand name printed on the appliance. Your 1997 Mr. Coffee drip machine doesn't care that the parent company changed hands three times; if the badge on the front says Mr. Coffee, that's the brand page you want.
If your brand isn't listed yet, it usually means we haven't found a freely redistributable manual for it in the Internet Archive collection. Try browsing the appliance categories — sometimes a single model is indexed even if the brand doesn't have its own landing page yet.