KitchenAid launches its first smart thermometer
At a glance:
- KitchenAid has released its first smart thermometer, available in single-probe ($100) and dual-probe ($200) models.
- The probes are waterproof and dishwasher safe with up to 24 hours of battery life and a 285-foot Bluetooth range extendable via a second internet-connected device.
- The thermometer connects to KitchenAid's app for graph-based cooking visualization, temperature alerts, and up to 20 saved cook profiles, competing against Meater, ThermoWorks, and sibling brand Whirlpool.
What KitchenAid is offering
KitchenAid has entered the connected cooking market with its first-ever smart thermometer, marking a notable expansion for a brand best known for stand mixers and countertop appliances. The product is available in two configurations: a single-probe model priced at $100 and a dual-probe option at $200. Although the company does not publish a maximum temperature rating in the specs, it says the device is designed for a wide range of cooking processes — grilling, roasting, smoking, air frying, and stovetop cooking.
Both probe variants are rated waterproof and dishwasher safe, addressing one of the most common pain points with kitchen electronics: cleanup after a messy cook. Battery life is rated at up to 24 hours on a full charge, which should comfortably cover long low-and-slow projects like smoking a whole brisket. A quick-charge feature can add roughly five hours of cooking time from just five minutes of charging, giving cooks a safety net if the battery runs low mid-recipe.
How the app and connectivity work
The thermometer connects to KitchenAid's dedicated app via Bluetooth, where cooks can view a graph of their cooking progress in real time. The app also supports up to 20 saved cook profiles, so frequent recipes can be referenced without re-entering settings each time. Timers and temperature alerts are built in, meaning the app can notify users when it is time to take the next step in a recipe based on reaching a target temperature.
Bluetooth range is rated at 285 feet out of the box, but KitchenAid includes a Range Extender Mode that can stretch that distance further by pairing the thermometer with a second internet-connected device placed in the home. That feature is aimed at outdoor cooking setups or large kitchens where the cook might step away from the grill or smoker for extended periods.
Where it fits in a crowded market
KitchenAid's thermometer joins an increasingly crowded field of connected meat probes and smart thermometers. Grilling-focused specialists such as Meater and ThermoWorks have been shipping Bluetooth-enabled probes for years, and several major appliance brands have followed suit. Notably, Whirlpool — which owns KitchenAid as part of its portfolio — has also been pushing smart cooking accessories, so the new thermometer can be read as an internal brand play within the same corporate family.
For consumers, the $100 entry point and the brand's strong recognition in kitchen appliances could make the KitchenAid option appealing even against more established probe makers. Whether the app ecosystem and feature set will be enough to differentiate it remains to be seen, but the launch signals that KitchenAid is serious about extending its footprint beyond countertop mixers into the connected kitchen space.
What to watch next
KitchenAid has not disclosed a maximum temperature ceiling for the probes, which could matter for high-heat applications like searing or deep frying. Early reviewers and buyers will likely test those limits quickly. It is also worth watching whether KitchenAid opens the app to third-party integrations or smart-home platforms, since rivals like Meater already support Alexa and other ecosystems. A competitive pricing move or a firmware update adding new alert types could help KitchenAid hold its ground as more reviews land.
FAQ
How much do KitchenAid's smart thermometer models cost?
What cooking methods is the KitchenAid smart thermometer designed for?
How does the KitchenAid smart thermometer compare to competitors like Meater and ThermoWorks?
More in the feed
Prepared by the editorial stack from public data and external sources.
Original article