
Key Specs
Jar Material
Tritan copolyester (BPA-free)
BPA-Free Verification
Brand-named BPA-free (Tritan, named material)
Motor Power
900W
Jar Capacity
32 oz
NutriBullet
#16 of 19 blenders tested
$100.00
What the product listing won't tell you
Know before you buy
The NutriBullet Pro 900 uses a Tritan copolyester cup β brand-named BPA-free but peer-reviewed studies show trace migration from Tritan, and the 32oz cup requires multiple rounds for any family-sized blending task.
You primarily blend cold, low-fat smoothies for one or two people and budget is the deciding factor.
NutriBullet
NutriBullet Pro 900
NutriBullet
NutriBullet Pro 900
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You're aware of the Tritan use-with-caution designation and are comfortable working within those restrictions.
You need a compact, light blender for a small kitchen or single-person household.
You regularly blend hot soups, nut butters, acidic juices, or high-fat ingredients β the Tritan jar's use-with-caution designation applies directly to these uses.
You're blending for a family of three or more and need family-size batches without multiple cycles.
Specs the product listing doesn't explain
What your food and family come into contact with every use
What determines how well this performs its core job
Ease of use, maintenance, and longevity
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3 criteria - open any layer to see exactly what we found
6.7
Safety
Acceptable
3.5
Efficacy
Poor
4.6
Usability
Below Average
βAre the materials my food touches actually safe, and has anyone independent looked at this?β
The NutriBullet Pro 900 uses a Tritan copolyester cup β marketed as BPA-free but evaluated by Mamavation, an independent health-testing organization, as 'use-with-caution.' Independent research has found migration of substitute chemicals from Tritan under standard blending conditions. The blade-base seal material is not publicly disclosed by NutriBullet, which limits the full picture on food-contact surfaces.
Bottom line: Acceptable for cold, low-fat blends if you follow the use-with-caution guidance. If hot soups, acidic foods, or nut butters are a regular part of your routine, a glass-jar blender would give you more confidence.
Criteria
Tritan is marketed as BPA-free and used by premium brands (Vitamix, Blendtec). However, Mamavation cites peer-reviewed evidence showing migration of DMIP (dimethyl isophthalate), BBP (benzylbutyl phthalate), and detectable BPA from Tritan samples under standard conditions. Estrogenic activity detect
βDoes this blender actually handle the ingredients my family throws at it?β
The 900W motor is adequate for basic fruit smoothies and liquids but falls short of the 1,000W minimum that kitchen testing labs identify for reliably handling tough ingredients β frozen fruit, whole nuts, and fibrous greens. The 32oz cup is practical for one or two servings but will need multiple cycles for a family of three or more.
Bottom line: Works well as a personal blender for straightforward daily smoothies. Not the right tool for nut butters, frozen-dense recipes, or feeding multiple people without multiple blend cycles.
Criteria
βWill this be easy to live with day to day?β
The 1-year warranty is standard for entry-level blenders β acceptable coverage, though brands like Vitamix offer 5β7 years at higher price points. Noise level for this model hasn't been measured by any testing lab, so we can't tell you how loud it runs.
Bottom line: Straightforward to use and clean, but the coverage window is short. Noise data would help families in open-plan homes or with young kids decide whether the sound during operation is manageable.
Criteria
Verified retailer - current pricing
Starting price
$100
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Sign up free#16 of 19 blenders reviewed
Brand explicitly names the specific polymer or material used (e.g., Tritan copolyester, borosilicate glass) AND claims BPA-free status. Named material allows independent researchers to assess the chemical class and its known risk profile. Score 6 mirrors the 'brand-named-claim with identifiable mate
Below TechGearLab's explicit 1000W threshold for tough-ingredient processing. Budget-tier motors (600β900W) leave detectable seeds, chunks, and unblended fibrous material in smoothies β documented by TechGearLab: 'budget options sometimes left detectable fruit seeds.' Adequate for basic liquids but
32β47oz is the compact countertop range β adequate for 1β3 servings per blend cycle. Requires multiple cycles for family portions. Budget glass-jar models (40oz) and NutriBullet personal countertop units fall here. Below TechGearLab's family standard but functional for single and small-household use
1β2 year warranty is the budget/entry-level norm. RedRecs buyer voice: 'budget options sacrifice longevity for affordability' β short warranty correlates with real durability gaps. Ninja's 1-year warranty paired with documented pitcher-cracking issues makes short warranty a genuine reliability signa