---
product_id: 663551935
title: "The Oracle Jet, Professional Coffee Machine with Manual and Automatic Milk Frother - With Knock Box, Milk Jug and Portafilter - 14 Pre-sets, 2.3L Water Tank, 1600 W, Stainless Steel"
brand: "sage"
price: "21701.41 DT"
currency: TND
in_stock: true
reviews_count: 11
category: "Sage"
url: https://www.desertcart.tn/products/663551935-the-oracle-jet-professional-coffee-machine-with-manual-and-automatic
store_origin: TN
region: Tunisia
---

# 1600W rapid heating power 2.3L large water tank capacity 14 precision pre-set brewing modes The Oracle Jet, Professional Coffee Machine with Manual and Automatic Milk Frother - With Knock Box, Milk Jug and Portafilter - 14 Pre-sets, 2.3L Water Tank, 1600 W, Stainless Steel

**Brand:** sage
**Price:** 21701.41 DT
**Availability:** ✅ In Stock

## Summary

> ☕ Elevate your mornings with pro-level coffee, faster than ever!

## Quick Answers

- **What is this?** The Oracle Jet, Professional Coffee Machine with Manual and Automatic Milk Frother - With Knock Box, Milk Jug and Portafilter - 14 Pre-sets, 2.3L Water Tank, 1600 W, Stainless Steel by sage
- **How much does it cost?** 21701.41 DT with free shipping
- **Is it available?** Yes, in stock and ready to ship
- **Where can I buy it?** [www.desertcart.tn](https://www.desertcart.tn/products/663551935-the-oracle-jet-professional-coffee-machine-with-manual-and-automatic)

## Best For

- sage enthusiasts

## Why This Product

- Trusted sage brand quality
- Free international shipping included
- Worldwide delivery with tracking
- 15-day hassle-free returns

## Key Features

- • **Custom Milk Texturing:** Manual and automatic frothing options deliver silky microfoam for stunning latte art and café-quality drinks.
- • **ThermoJet Heating System:** Instant heat-up and precise temperature control for flawless espresso extraction every time.
- • **All-Inclusive Barista Kit:** Comes complete with knock box, 480ml milk jug, and portafilter—everything you need to elevate your home coffee game.
- • **Professional-Grade Portafilter:** 58mm stainless steel portafilter with 22g dose capacity ensures rich, complex coffee flavor in every shot.
- • **Barista-Level Speed & Precision:** From bean to cup in under a minute with automated grinding, dosing, tamping, and milk frothing—perfect coffee, no wait.

## Overview

The Sage Oracle Jet is a premium semi-automatic espresso machine featuring a powerful 1600W ThermoJet heating system, a large 2.3L water tank, and 14 customizable pre-sets. It automates grinding, dosing, tamping, and milk frothing to deliver barista-quality espresso, cappuccino, and latte drinks in under a minute. Crafted with a professional 58mm stainless steel portafilter and equipped with a knock box and milk jug, it offers both manual and automatic milk texturing for perfect microfoam and latte art.

## Description

Free delivery and returns on eligible orders. Buy Sage - The Oracle Jet, Professional Coffee Machine with Manual and Automatic Milk Frother - With Knock Box, Milk Jug and Portafilter - 14 Pre-sets, 2.3L Water Tank, 1600 W, Stainless Steel at desertcart UK.

Review: Excellent espresso machine with built-in grinder, steamer, and guidance for effortless use. - This review is in two parts; the first is a short summary of an excellent machine, the latter goes into it in more detail. I came to the Sage Oracle Jet after my Sage Oracle Touch died. The Oracle Jet Like is a fantastic choice of coffee machine if you don’t want to nerd out on the minutiae of making coffee. It does all the hard work, but you must orchestrate it and move it along. From pressing the power button to being ready to make a coffee takes a few seconds, which makes it easy to duck out and make a drink between work meetings. You can make hot and cold (cooler) brew drinks straight into ice from the menu. The Barista training mode in the Jet helps you get the grind right monitoring the pour time of coffee of each shot and recommending any changes you need to make it better. It steams your milk; dairy or non-dairy, to a good texture for milk drinks; and there are clear differences between latte, cappuccino and flat white. It’s easy to change settings; if you are a mixed milk house you can save drink settings with different milks or just switch as you make it. Managing consumables in the machine is simple; there is a good-sized coffee hopper on the top. The water tank is removable from the back, and you can fill from the tap; and there is a flip up flap on the front you can pour from a jug. The water tank comes with a filter which helps reduce the hardness of the water to protect from scaling. The tank seems to last about 10 shots of coffee and milk steaming: with associated minor cleaning purges. The top refill flap makes it easy to top it up as you go. As the Oracle Jet teaches you how to make coffee better it helps you grow with you; as you can adjust the recipes of the drinks; and save them as the default or add your version to the menu. The coffee from the machine is big step up from an automatic bean to cup machine; giving you a drink that is closer to what you would get from a coffee shop. If you are coming to it from an automatic machine, go slow as the coffee is stronger; and you will notice the caffeine in your beans. You can improve things yourself by tweaking the recipes to your taste and small procedural steps like running an empty shot through the portafilter to warm it up before you start; and purge the water out of the steam wand can make the coffee better for a little water. The Oracle Jet is the better machine for me; the faster start up alone saves me 10s of minutes a day over waiting for the boilers to be ready on the touch. The Grinder is quieter, the screen is nicer – and the barista guidance has helped me make consistently good coffee. Because my touch died, I can’t do a direct comparison between the two; but the espresso looks better, and the automatic milk is clearly a step up. It’s far from a cheap coffee machine; it is well made, easy to use for in and experienced users alike. ------ This second section is about setup and living with the machine. I came to the Oracle Jet after Oracle Touch died before Christmas. The Jet arrives in an enormous box which contains the machine and an array of accessories (except coffee) to get you going. You can rectify the coffee in the long term via the sage subscription service. You get the machine; a portafilter and a single and dual shot basket for the jet (the dual shot basket ships in it) a few cleaning brushes, a water hardness strip, a knock box (to empty the portafilter), the hopper for coffee beans and instructions. It is a big machine measuring 42.5 (h) x 38.1 (w) x 36.8 (d) (in cm) and it weighs 12Kg. The portafilter works fine with my third party bottomless portafilter too; which is what I was using when I took the photos; the sage portafilter has two spouts. The design is an evolution from its predecessor; there is better lighting of the coffee prep area; the screen is larger easier to read and much more responsive. There are guide marks on the grinder and group head to help you line things up – and the finger loop on the steam wand stops you burning your fingers. When you first turn the machine on it takes you through a setup wizard that teaches first how to setup and maintain the machine, then how to use it to make a good cup of coffee. The basic setup includes adding it to your WIFI (it doesn’t show up on WIFI as Sage or Oracle Jet it shows as Quectel Wireless Solutions, which allows it to download updates – which mine did after the first cup of coffee. There isn’t an app right now, it’s just for firmware updates. With the WIFI setup it takes you through cleaning things, priming the water filter and filling the water, testing its hardness along the way. With that done the machine purges, and then you are ready to make a coffee. You can fill the large water tank by removing it from the back; this is made easier thanks to a lift mechanism that lets you roll it around. You can also fill it from the top with a flip up flap. Unlike the touch this doesn’t have the sprung press release which eventually broke; replacing it with some ever-reliable magnets to hold it shut. The top surface is textured plastic; as there aren’t boilers inside It doesn’t seem to be especially useful to time save on prep; except to have the cups nearby, as unlike machines with hot water boilers the Oracle Jet doesn’t warm up significantly as its on for so short a time; and there isn’t water in a boiler keeping warm. The Oracle Jet has an assistant mode that evaluates the espresso it makes based on time and pour rate and has you adjust the grind size to optimise it. As with the Oracle touch the machine grinds, distributes and tamps as it goes. The final puck on the jet looks superior to the one on my touch; it has a smoother surface. The machine is new. On my first cup we did that 4 times. The last one stepped back its predecessor. I requested a latte as my first drink; so, the next step was milk preparation; I added semi skimmed milk to the included pitcher; and put the steam wand into it. The machine automatically steams the milk; at the start its worrying as it adds a lot of air to about 35c, before switching to steam to heat it up and mix. The final milk had a glossy texture. Mixing the two together left me with my first latte. It’s not going to win an award, but it was a lovely for a first drink, nicely balanced and the milk had a good texture to the drink. When you are more confident in your coffee making skills, you can turn off the automatic guidance (you can also ignore it) and do more thinks manually. After your first cup the machine shows you how to clean things up – you can purge the grinder by pressing and holding on the button on screen; run water out of the americano tap to heat a cup- which splashes a lot and purge the steam wand. With the cleanup done, the machine asked to restart for a firmware update; but doesn’t tell you what it’s doing. It restarted as part of the update; but there weren’t any obvious immediate changes. After that it sits there on the coffee counter; unlike the Oracle Touch the heat up is a few seconds to ready, compared to a few minutes. It helps to run a blank shot to warm the portafilter and run steam out to get rid of water in the wand before you make a coffee. I have found steaming milk whilst coffee grinds then making the espresso is the quickest way to a coffee. The milk auto texturing is a step up from the oracle touch, with a richer milk for flat whites and a lighter foam on cappuccinos. You can use the wand in automatic mode; or run it manually. Since that first cup I have tried it with full and skimmed milk, and you get by far the best milk from fresh full fat milk; it makes excellent flat whites. Fresh Skimmed milk gives good foam but a few days later it is more like hot milk. If you are coming to this machine from instant or an automatic machine, take it easy as it feels like you get a bigger hit of caffeine here.
Review: Amazing - This is saving.me a fortune on overpriced coffees from stores.

## Features

- Automated Precision: Integrates automatic grinding, dosing, tamping, and milk texturing, transforming beans to latte in under a minute, allowing you to enjoy your espresso, cappuccino or latte faster
- Auto Queue & ThermoJet: Line up your next step, whether steaming milk or brewing espresso, so it happens automatically. Enjoy fast, energy-efficient heating and precise temperature control with the ThermoJet heating system for barista-quality results
- Professional Portafilter: Comes with a 58mm stainless steel portafilter, holding a 22g dose for rich and complex coffee, as well as the Knock Box 10 and a 480ml milk jug
- Custom Milk Texturing: Auto and manual adjustments for milk temperature and texture, achieving perfect microfoam for latte art

## Technical Specifications

| Specification | Value |
|---------------|-------|
| ASIN | B0DFH8RM35 |
| Best Sellers Rank | 219,362 in Home & Kitchen ( See Top 100 in Home & Kitchen ) 50 in Bean-to-Cup Coffee Machines |
| Brand Name | Sage |
| Capacity | 2.3 litres |
| Coffee Input Type | whole_beans, pre_ground |
| Coffee Maker Type | Espresso Machine |
| Colour | Brushed Stainless Steel |
| Country of Origin | China |
| Customer Reviews | 3.9 3.9 out of 5 stars (16) |
| Filter Type | Reusable |
| Human Interface Input | Buttons |
| Included Components | Filter, Milk Frother |
| Is the item dishwasher safe? | No |
| Item Dimensions D x W x H | 45.7D x 45.5W x 50.8H centimetres |
| Item Weight | 12.1 Kilograms |
| Manufacturer | BRG Appliances |
| Material | Stainless Steel |
| Model Name | SES985BSS4GUK1 |
| Model Number | SES985BSS4GUK1 |
| Number of Items | 1 |
| Operation Mode | Semi-Automatic |
| Other Special Features of the Product | Milk Frother |
| Part Number | SES985BSS4GUK1 |
| Power Source | AC adapter |
| Specific Uses For Product | Cappuccino, Iced Coffee, Latte, Mocha |
| Style | Modern |
| Unit Count | 1.0 count |
| Voltage | 240 Volts |
| Wattage | 1600 watts |

## Product Details

- **Brand:** Sage
- **Capacity:** 2.3 litres
- **Colour:** Brushed Stainless Steel
- **Product dimensions:** 45.7D x 45.5W x 50.8H centimetres
- **Special feature:** Milk Frother

## Images

![The Oracle Jet, Professional Coffee Machine with Manual and Automatic Milk Frother - With Knock Box, Milk Jug and Portafilter - 14 Pre-sets, 2.3L Water Tank, 1600 W, Stainless Steel - Image 1](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/71K5QaslQJL.jpg)

## Available Options

This product comes in different **Color** options.

## Customer Reviews

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Excellent espresso machine with built-in grinder, steamer, and guidance for effortless use.
*by C***E on 19 January 2025*

This review is in two parts; the first is a short summary of an excellent machine, the latter goes into it in more detail. I came to the Sage Oracle Jet after my Sage Oracle Touch died. The Oracle Jet Like is a fantastic choice of coffee machine if you don’t want to nerd out on the minutiae of making coffee. It does all the hard work, but you must orchestrate it and move it along. From pressing the power button to being ready to make a coffee takes a few seconds, which makes it easy to duck out and make a drink between work meetings. You can make hot and cold (cooler) brew drinks straight into ice from the menu. The Barista training mode in the Jet helps you get the grind right monitoring the pour time of coffee of each shot and recommending any changes you need to make it better. It steams your milk; dairy or non-dairy, to a good texture for milk drinks; and there are clear differences between latte, cappuccino and flat white. It’s easy to change settings; if you are a mixed milk house you can save drink settings with different milks or just switch as you make it. Managing consumables in the machine is simple; there is a good-sized coffee hopper on the top. The water tank is removable from the back, and you can fill from the tap; and there is a flip up flap on the front you can pour from a jug. The water tank comes with a filter which helps reduce the hardness of the water to protect from scaling. The tank seems to last about 10 shots of coffee and milk steaming: with associated minor cleaning purges. The top refill flap makes it easy to top it up as you go. As the Oracle Jet teaches you how to make coffee better it helps you grow with you; as you can adjust the recipes of the drinks; and save them as the default or add your version to the menu. The coffee from the machine is big step up from an automatic bean to cup machine; giving you a drink that is closer to what you would get from a coffee shop. If you are coming to it from an automatic machine, go slow as the coffee is stronger; and you will notice the caffeine in your beans. You can improve things yourself by tweaking the recipes to your taste and small procedural steps like running an empty shot through the portafilter to warm it up before you start; and purge the water out of the steam wand can make the coffee better for a little water. The Oracle Jet is the better machine for me; the faster start up alone saves me 10s of minutes a day over waiting for the boilers to be ready on the touch. The Grinder is quieter, the screen is nicer – and the barista guidance has helped me make consistently good coffee. Because my touch died, I can’t do a direct comparison between the two; but the espresso looks better, and the automatic milk is clearly a step up. It’s far from a cheap coffee machine; it is well made, easy to use for in and experienced users alike. ------ This second section is about setup and living with the machine. I came to the Oracle Jet after Oracle Touch died before Christmas. The Jet arrives in an enormous box which contains the machine and an array of accessories (except coffee) to get you going. You can rectify the coffee in the long term via the sage subscription service. You get the machine; a portafilter and a single and dual shot basket for the jet (the dual shot basket ships in it) a few cleaning brushes, a water hardness strip, a knock box (to empty the portafilter), the hopper for coffee beans and instructions. It is a big machine measuring 42.5 (h) x 38.1 (w) x 36.8 (d) (in cm) and it weighs 12Kg. The portafilter works fine with my third party bottomless portafilter too; which is what I was using when I took the photos; the sage portafilter has two spouts. The design is an evolution from its predecessor; there is better lighting of the coffee prep area; the screen is larger easier to read and much more responsive. There are guide marks on the grinder and group head to help you line things up – and the finger loop on the steam wand stops you burning your fingers. When you first turn the machine on it takes you through a setup wizard that teaches first how to setup and maintain the machine, then how to use it to make a good cup of coffee. The basic setup includes adding it to your WIFI (it doesn’t show up on WIFI as Sage or Oracle Jet it shows as Quectel Wireless Solutions, which allows it to download updates – which mine did after the first cup of coffee. There isn’t an app right now, it’s just for firmware updates. With the WIFI setup it takes you through cleaning things, priming the water filter and filling the water, testing its hardness along the way. With that done the machine purges, and then you are ready to make a coffee. You can fill the large water tank by removing it from the back; this is made easier thanks to a lift mechanism that lets you roll it around. You can also fill it from the top with a flip up flap. Unlike the touch this doesn’t have the sprung press release which eventually broke; replacing it with some ever-reliable magnets to hold it shut. The top surface is textured plastic; as there aren’t boilers inside It doesn’t seem to be especially useful to time save on prep; except to have the cups nearby, as unlike machines with hot water boilers the Oracle Jet doesn’t warm up significantly as its on for so short a time; and there isn’t water in a boiler keeping warm. The Oracle Jet has an assistant mode that evaluates the espresso it makes based on time and pour rate and has you adjust the grind size to optimise it. As with the Oracle touch the machine grinds, distributes and tamps as it goes. The final puck on the jet looks superior to the one on my touch; it has a smoother surface. The machine is new. On my first cup we did that 4 times. The last one stepped back its predecessor. I requested a latte as my first drink; so, the next step was milk preparation; I added semi skimmed milk to the included pitcher; and put the steam wand into it. The machine automatically steams the milk; at the start its worrying as it adds a lot of air to about 35c, before switching to steam to heat it up and mix. The final milk had a glossy texture. Mixing the two together left me with my first latte. It’s not going to win an award, but it was a lovely for a first drink, nicely balanced and the milk had a good texture to the drink. When you are more confident in your coffee making skills, you can turn off the automatic guidance (you can also ignore it) and do more thinks manually. After your first cup the machine shows you how to clean things up – you can purge the grinder by pressing and holding on the button on screen; run water out of the americano tap to heat a cup- which splashes a lot and purge the steam wand. With the cleanup done, the machine asked to restart for a firmware update; but doesn’t tell you what it’s doing. It restarted as part of the update; but there weren’t any obvious immediate changes. After that it sits there on the coffee counter; unlike the Oracle Touch the heat up is a few seconds to ready, compared to a few minutes. It helps to run a blank shot to warm the portafilter and run steam out to get rid of water in the wand before you make a coffee. I have found steaming milk whilst coffee grinds then making the espresso is the quickest way to a coffee. The milk auto texturing is a step up from the oracle touch, with a richer milk for flat whites and a lighter foam on cappuccinos. You can use the wand in automatic mode; or run it manually. Since that first cup I have tried it with full and skimmed milk, and you get by far the best milk from fresh full fat milk; it makes excellent flat whites. Fresh Skimmed milk gives good foam but a few days later it is more like hot milk. If you are coming to this machine from instant or an automatic machine, take it easy as it feels like you get a bigger hit of caffeine here.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Amazing
*by A***Y on 6 February 2026*

This is saving.me a fortune on overpriced coffees from stores.

### ⭐ Very poor and expensive coffee machine!
*by I***Y on 14 January 2026*

I previously owned an older version of this machine, which was excellent, so I had high expectations for the Sage Oracle Jet. Unfortunately, this model has been very disappointing—especially considering it costs almost double the price. The coffee extraction is inconsistent, making it difficult to get a reliable cup, and the built-in grinder performs poorly, often failing to grind properly. This seriously affects the overall quality and usability of the machine. After experiencing these issues, I checked online and found many other users reporting similar quality and consistency problems. Given the premium price point, this level of performance is unacceptable. Sadly, this feels like a step backwards from the older model rather than an improvement.

## Frequently Bought Together

- Sage - The Oracle Jet, Professional Coffee Machine with Manual and Automatic Milk Frother, Brushed Stainless Steel
- Sage - Espresso Cleaning Tablets - Removes Coffee Oils & Residues from all Sage Espresso Machines, 8 Count (Pack of 1)
- Sage - Temp Control Milk Jug - Milk Jug with Integrated Thermometer, Brushed Stainless Steel

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*Product available on Desertcart Tunisia*
*Store origin: TN*
*Last updated: 2026-06-01*