Great Awesome Deals! Fast Shipping Across Australia!
Great Awesome Deals! Fast Shipping Across Australia!
The quick answer: for most Australian homes and small offices, a hot-and-cold bottle-fed benchtop cooler is the best pick, it needs no plumbing, sits on the bench, and dispenses chilled and near-boiling water on demand. Choose a plumbed-in model instead if you have a nearby mains connection and higher daily use, since it filters as it goes and never needs a bottle refill.
Benchtop water coolers combine filtered drinking water with instant hot, cold, and ambient dispensing from a compact unit that sits on your kitchen bench, office counter, or break-room surface — no floor space, and no waiting for a kettle. Awesome Water Filters stocks a range of benchtop coolers, including bottle-fed and plumbed-in countertop models for home, office, and commercial use, starting from $199.00.
Browse the full range below.
A benchtop water cooler is a countertop unit that chills, heats and dispenses drinking water on demand. Bottle-fed models take a small top-mounted 5L or 10L bottle and cool the water internally; most also deliver near-boiling water, making them a compact alternative to a kettle. Plumbed-in models connect to your mains supply and include built-in filtration.
Benchtop coolers are popular in small offices, clinics, real-estate agencies, retail spaces and homes where a full-size freestanding cooler would take up too much floor space.
The difference comes down to your water source. Bottle-fed coolers need no plumbing and go anywhere; plumbed-in coolers connect to the mains, filter the water and remove bottle refills — better for higher-use settings.
| Bottle-fed | Plumbed-in | |
|---|---|---|
| Plumbing | None required | Licensed plumber needed |
| Filtration | Depends on water added | Built-in filter reduces chlorine taste & odour |
| Ongoing cost | Bottle supply | Filter changes only |
| Best for | Homes & spaces without a mains tap nearby | Higher-use offices & commercial settings |
Choose a benchtop cooler if you want to save floor space and serve a home or small team; choose a freestanding cooler for higher daily volume and larger tanks. As a rule of thumb, benchtop suits up to about 10 regular users; beyond that, a freestanding water cooler handles the throughput more comfortably.
Check four things before you buy:
A benchtop cooler with hot and cold functions typically costs around $160 to $245 per year to run on average Australian electricity, depending on how often the heating element cycles and whether it has an energy-saving mode. Cold-only models cost less.
Not usually. Bottle-fed benchtop coolers need no plumbing — you fill them from a top-mounted 5L or 10L bottle. Only plumbed-in models connect to your mains water, and those require a licensed plumber to install.
Plumbed-in benchtop coolers include a built-in carbon filter that reduces chlorine taste and odour. Bottle-fed models rely on the quality of the water you add, so many households pair them with filtered or purified water.
Hot-and-cold models dispense near-boiling water on demand, which suits tea, instant coffee and soups. The maximum temperature is around 84 to 89°C on our models, so check the hot-water spec if you need it at full boiling point.
Yes, for small offices and teams. Benchtop coolers suit spaces without floor room or a plumbed connection. For 10 or more regular users, a freestanding cooler with a larger tank is usually the better fit.
Wipe the exterior and drip tray regularly, and sanitise the internal tank every 3 to 6 months following the manufacturer's instructions. Models with removable drip trays and components are easier to maintain.
Most bottle-fed benchtop coolers use 5L or 10L bottles with a standard threaded neck. Confirm the compatible bottle size and thread type in the product specifications before ordering.
The quick answer: for most Australian homes and small offices, a hot-and-cold bottle-fed benchtop cooler is the best pick, it needs no plumbing, sits on the bench, and dispenses chilled and near-boiling water on demand. Choose a plumbed-in model instead if you have a nearby mains connection and higher daily use, since it filters as it goes and never needs a bottle refill.
Benchtop water coolers combine filtered drinking water with instant hot, cold, and ambient dispensing from a compact unit that sits on your kitchen bench, office counter, or break-room surface — no floor space, and no waiting for a kettle. Awesome Water Filters stocks a range of benchtop coolers, including bottle-fed and plumbed-in countertop models for home, office, and commercial use, starting from $199.00.
Browse the full range below.
A benchtop water cooler is a countertop unit that chills, heats and dispenses drinking water on demand. Bottle-fed models take a small top-mounted 5L or 10L bottle and cool the water internally; most also deliver near-boiling water, making them a compact alternative to a kettle. Plumbed-in models connect to your mains supply and include built-in filtration.
Benchtop coolers are popular in small offices, clinics, real-estate agencies, retail spaces and homes where a full-size freestanding cooler would take up too much floor space.
The difference comes down to your water source. Bottle-fed coolers need no plumbing and go anywhere; plumbed-in coolers connect to the mains, filter the water and remove bottle refills — better for higher-use settings.
| Bottle-fed | Plumbed-in | |
|---|---|---|
| Plumbing | None required | Licensed plumber needed |
| Filtration | Depends on water added | Built-in filter reduces chlorine taste & odour |
| Ongoing cost | Bottle supply | Filter changes only |
| Best for | Homes & spaces without a mains tap nearby | Higher-use offices & commercial settings |
Choose a benchtop cooler if you want to save floor space and serve a home or small team; choose a freestanding cooler for higher daily volume and larger tanks. As a rule of thumb, benchtop suits up to about 10 regular users; beyond that, a freestanding water cooler handles the throughput more comfortably.
Check four things before you buy:
A benchtop cooler with hot and cold functions typically costs around $160 to $245 per year to run on average Australian electricity, depending on how often the heating element cycles and whether it has an energy-saving mode. Cold-only models cost less.
Not usually. Bottle-fed benchtop coolers need no plumbing — you fill them from a top-mounted 5L or 10L bottle. Only plumbed-in models connect to your mains water, and those require a licensed plumber to install.
Plumbed-in benchtop coolers include a built-in carbon filter that reduces chlorine taste and odour. Bottle-fed models rely on the quality of the water you add, so many households pair them with filtered or purified water.
Hot-and-cold models dispense near-boiling water on demand, which suits tea, instant coffee and soups. The maximum temperature is around 84 to 89°C on our models, so check the hot-water spec if you need it at full boiling point.
Yes, for small offices and teams. Benchtop coolers suit spaces without floor room or a plumbed connection. For 10 or more regular users, a freestanding cooler with a larger tank is usually the better fit.
Wipe the exterior and drip tray regularly, and sanitise the internal tank every 3 to 6 months following the manufacturer's instructions. Models with removable drip trays and components are easier to maintain.
Most bottle-fed benchtop coolers use 5L or 10L bottles with a standard threaded neck. Confirm the compatible bottle size and thread type in the product specifications before ordering.
Sign up to get the latest on sales, new releases and more …