Wide shot of the Breville Oracle Dual Boiler espresso machine on a counter at a trade show
Full view: dual‑boiler Breville Oracle with built‑in grinder and shiny stainless shell.

I just came across a video purportedly showcasing an upcoming espresso machine from Breville. Nothing new there. However, this particular model is a little different from the rest of the Breville (Sage in Europe) line-up because: it features two boilers. This is significant news in the world of coffee and espresso.

That means you’ll be able to steam and brew at the same time. For people in a rush this is a real time saving feature. You’ll be out the door with your morning Latte or Cappuccino or Flat White or American faster than if you have to wait for the steam boiler to warm up after brewing the shot. Now you can do both tasks in parallel. Nice!

One stand out feature that caught my eye (as seen in the video below) is the gorgeous touch screen. If this leak does indeed show what’s coming, then this is really upping Breville’s UX game. Compared to my Jura ENA 8 which is fantastic, the Breville screen looks to be higher resolution, easier to read and, simply, more modern. For today’s consumers little design touches like this do make a difference. We’ve come to expect this sort of thing in modern appliances and machines because our phones and apps are so refined compared to days gone by.

Another cool feature that portends a sort of AI-centric appliance future: per the video, the grinder can automatically adjust based on how the previous shot turned out. Not sure how this works. But that’s pretty handy if it lives up to the promise.

Check out the leaked footage that has the espresso community buzzing:

Watch the Leak: Breville Dual Boiler 2025

Summary: The Big 3 New Features

  • The screen is gorgeous. Finally — real estate for meaningful shot data, not a postage-stamp PID.
  • Dual boilers = zero bottleneck. Brew and steam at the same time, no flush dances, no waiting.
  • Auto Dial‑In intrigues. If it truly “learns” from shots, Breville just productized r/espresso anxiety.

Market Impact: Prosumer Lite Goes Mainstream

Target buyer: Home espresso enthusiasts who want manual-level shots but also want to press “go” before that 8 a.m. Zoom.

Competition: Lelit Bianca, Profitec Pro 700, ECM Synchronika, Rancilio Silvia Pro X, plus Gaggia Classic Pro die-hards. Expect rivals to push longevity/repairability angles.

Breville could disrupt this crowded market. Quality dual boiler espresso machines typically start at $2,500 USD, but expect Breville to undercut rivals. Unlike pure-play brands like Rocket Espresso, Gaggia, or Rancilio, Breville’s product diversity –from toaster ovens to blenders — gives it the scale and resources to compete aggressively on price while maintaining quality.

Price Guess (Speculation)

-up of Breville’s leaked Oracle Dual Boiler showing large touch screen with shot data
Breville’s (Sage) Oracle Dual Boiler leak: big touch UI with pressure and temp readouts.
  • Oracle Touch hovers around ~$2,000.
  • This new Dual Boiler? Bet on $1,999–$2,499 depending on bundle.
  • If Breville undercuts Italian rivals by a few hundred, hello 2025 disruption.

Overdue? Yes.

Breville already had the parts: BDB internals, Oracle automation, Touch UI. Merging them was inevitable. Given their tech stack and reach, a true dual-boiler Oracle was only a matter of time.

We should expect to see this hit the market some time later this year in Q4.

More context via Sage/Breville (official site).

For more on Breville’s espresso lineup and extraction tips:

Clinton Stark
Filmmaker and editor at Stark Insider, covering arts, AI & tech, and indie film. Inspired by Bergman, slow cinema and Chipotle. Often found behind the camera or in the edit bay. Peloton: ClintTheMint.