Once you start brewing pour-over coffee, it’s over for you — there’s really no going back to drip coffee. And one of the most important, yet underrated tools, of making pour over is the coffee scale. When it comes to pour overs, accuracy is key. From the weight of coffee to the time it takes for water to get through the bed of coffee grounds, a good coffee scale will ensure not only do you have a great cup of coffee, but whether or not you can replicate that cup over and over again with other factors (i.e. beans, grind size, method) staying constant. So do you need a fancy $150 coffee scale, or does a $50 model do enough? Here’s how the two compare.
Price (Hario): $57 | Price (Acaia): $150
Build
Full disclosure: Hario’s drip scale is not the cheapest coffee scale on the market. It is, however, the scale that all other models are typically weighed against.

V60 Drip Scale
The Acaia Pearl scale is also made of plastic, but it doesn’t have a separate floating weighing platform. It’s a sleeker, more streamlined scale that also makes it easier to transport. The Pearl runs on a rechargeable lithium battery, and features a brightly lit LED display. Neither scale is waterproof, but Acaia does sell a pricier waterproof model, the Luna.