Behind The Product

Are Electric Can Openers Worth It?

May 13, 2026

Are Electric Can Openers Worth It?
Yes, for most home cooks. If you open cans more than a few times a week, deal with hand or wrist pain, or want safer edges and no blade near your food, an electric opener pays for itself quickly.

1. Who Is an Electric Can Opener Truly Worth It For?

It depends on your habits and your hands.

  • Anyone with arthritis or weak grip. Electric openers remove the need for gripping, twisting, or fine motor control entirely.
  • Anyone who cooks with canned goods regularly. Open three or more cans a week and the time saved adds up fast.
  • Anyone who has cut themselves on a can lid. A side-cut blade leaves smooth, touchable edges on both the can and the lid, every time.
  • Anyone cooking for children or elderly family members. Smooth edges mean no sharp lids near food or in the trash.

📖  Want the full picture? Electric Can Openers: The Complete Guide (2026)

2. What Do You Actually Get for the Price?

At $24.99 to $59.99, here is what you get that a manual opener cannot deliver.

  • Hands-free, one-button operation. Press once and the opener walks around the can on its own.
  • Smooth, safe edges on every can. The side-cut blade runs along the outside of the rim. Both the can and the lid come out with rounded, touchable edges.
  • No blade contact with food. The side-cut blade stays entirely outside the can, unlike manual blades that cut directly through the lid.
  • Touch-free lid removal. A built-in magnet catches the lid the moment the cut finishes.
💡  Third-party verdict: Food Network, Consumer Reports, and TODAY Shop all highlighted Kitchen Mama as a standout among handheld electric models — praising smooth side-cut edges and the blade never contacting the food inside.

→  See also: Which Can Opener Is the Best? Manual vs. Electric

3. What Are the Most Common Objections — and Do They Hold Up?

Four concerns come up often. Here is whether they hold up.

Objection The concern The reality
Takes up counter space Bulky countertop models need an outlet Kitchen Mama is handheld and fits in a drawer. No outlet needed.
Batteries run out Replacing or charging batteries is a hassle USB-C models charge like your phone. Battery models last months per set.
Too expensive Manual openers cost $5. Why spend more? The Mini is $24.99. Over 3 to 5 years, that is under $10 per year.
Hard to clean Electric parts and water do not mix A quick dry toothbrush scrub is all it needs. The blade never touches food.

→  See also: How to Fix an Electric Can Opener That Won't Work

→  See also: Battery vs. Rechargeable Can Openers: Which Should You Choose?

4. Does an Electric Can Opener Save Money Over Time?

Yes. At $29.99, the Auto 1.0 works out to just a few dollars a year, a fraction of what most households spend replacing worn-out manual openers.

USB-C models (Mini Plus, Orbit One) cost nothing to run beyond the occasional charge. Battery models last several months on a $1 to $2 set of AA Alkalines.

Basic care goes a long way: a quick wipe after each use and storing it dry keeps the blade sharp and the motor running strong for years to come.

→  See also: Which Kitchen Mama Can Opener Is Right for You?

→  See also: How Does a Kitchen Mama Electric Can Opener Work?

Key Takeaways

  • Worth it for anyone who cooks regularly, has hand or wrist pain, or wants smooth safe edges.
  • Four things a manual opener can't match: hands-free operation, smooth edges, no blade near food, touch-free lid removal.
  • Counter space, batteries, price — none of these objections apply to Kitchen Mama.
  • Battery models last months per set. USB-C models (Mini Plus, Orbit One) open 30 to 60 cans per charge.
  • At just a few dollars a year to run, it costs far less than repeatedly replacing a manual opener.