Office Coffee Guide

Moving Office? How to Choose the Right Coffee Machine for Your New Workplace

Moving office is the ideal time to review your coffee setup properly. A new workplace often means a different kitchen layout, different staff numbers, a new style of meeting or customer space, and a chance to decide whether your current machine still suits the business.

For most workplaces, the best starting point is usually a bean-to-cup coffee machine, but the right answer depends on daily drinks volume, milk requirements, available space, budget, and whether you want to buy or lease. If you are planning an office move, it is worth thinking about coffee early rather than leaving it until after everyone has moved in.

1. Start With How the New Office Will Use the Machine

The first question is not which machine looks best. It is who will use it, where it will sit, and what role coffee plays in the new office. A machine for a staff-only kitchen is usually different from the right setup for a reception area, a client-facing showroom, or a meeting-heavy workplace where visitors are offered drinks regularly.

When businesses move office, coffee is often treated as a later detail, but it usually affects staff experience more than expected. A better setup can help the new workplace feel finished from day one.

2. Check Staff Numbers and Expected Daily Drinks

One of the biggest factors is how many drinks the machine will need to produce each day. A smaller office with a coffee-loving team may still need a capable machine, while a larger office with lighter usage may need something simpler than expected.

It is also important to think about peak demand, not just average use. Mid-morning, lunchtime, busy meeting days and client visits can all quickly show whether a machine is undersized for the new office.

3. Decide Whether Bean-to-Cup Is the Right Fit

For most office moves, a bean-to-cup coffee machine is usually the strongest option. It offers fresh coffee, simple operation and consistent drinks without needing trained staff. That makes it ideal for workplaces where multiple people will use the machine throughout the day.

A more hands-on traditional espresso machine can work in hospitality-led spaces, but for a typical office environment, bean-to-cup usually wins on speed, ease of use and practicality.

4. Think About Milk Drinks, Cleaning and Maintenance

If the new office wants cappuccinos, lattes and flat whites, milk setup becomes an important part of the decision. Fresh milk systems can feel more premium, but they also involve more cleaning and more staff awareness. Lower-maintenance milk systems can be a better fit if simplicity matters more than presentation.

The right choice depends on how the machine will be used day to day, not just what sounds best in theory.

5. Check the Practical Side Before the Move

Before choosing a machine, check the practical requirements in the new office. Counter space, power supply, mains water, drainage, access for delivery and general layout can all affect what is realistic. A coffee machine that looks ideal on paper can become awkward if the space is not ready for it.

This is one of the main reasons office moves are a good time to review coffee properly. It gives you the chance to plan the setup around the new environment instead of trying to force an older machine into a new space.

6. Decide Whether to Buy or Lease

Moving office often brings a lot of costs at once, which is why many businesses use the move as the point to reconsider whether buying or leasing makes more sense. Buying outright can work well if there is budget already set aside and the business wants a straightforward one-off purchase.

Leasing can be a strong option if cash flow matters or if the business wants a better machine than the current upfront budget allows. For many workplaces, spreading the cost makes it easier to improve the overall office coffee experience at the same time as the move.

7. Office Move Coffee Machine Checklist

  • How many staff and visitors will use the machine?
  • How many drinks do you expect per day?
  • Will the machine be staff-only or customer-facing?
  • Do you need black coffee only or milk-based drinks too?
  • What counter space, power and water access is available?
  • Is ease of use more important than hands-on coffee preparation?
  • Would buying, leasing or renting suit the move best?
  • When does delivery, installation and training need to happen?

8. Common Mistakes to Avoid

One of the most common mistakes is leaving the coffee machine decision too late. By that point, the new office layout is often fixed and the machine becomes an afterthought rather than part of the workplace experience.

Other common mistakes include choosing on price alone, underestimating drinks volume, forgetting plumbing or power requirements, or picking a milk system that does not match how the team will actually use the machine. In most cases, the best office coffee setup comes from matching the machine to the new workplace rather than choosing the cheapest or most familiar option.

What Usually Works Best for a New Office?

For many businesses, the strongest starting point is an office-friendly bean-to-cup machine that is easy to use, reliable throughout the day and capable of producing both black coffee and milk-based drinks. That is why so many businesses looking at office coffee machines start with bean-to-cup options first.

If you want to see how this can work in practice, our office coffee solutions page and this Tripadvisor office coffee case study are useful places to explore further.

Moving Office and Need Help Choosing the Right Coffee Machine?

The best machine for a new office depends on the size of the team, expected drinks volume, milk requirements, available space and how hands-on you want the coffee setup to be. If you are comparing options, start with our office coffee machines page or browse our wider commercial coffee machines range to find the right fit for your new workplace.