Kenwood MultiPro Go or Bosch MultiTalent 3: which food processor wins?

If you’re choosing between these two food processors, you’re probably after one machine that can chop onions, grate cheese, slice veg, and maybe even handle dough without cluttering up a UK kitchen worktop. The Kenwood MultiPro Go FDP22.130GY is the cheaper, more compact option, while the Bosch MultiTalent 3 MCM3201BGB offers a bigger bowl, more power, and a blender attachment for extra versatility. Both are well-reviewed, but they suit different households and cooking habits. Here’s the straight answer on which one is better value for your kitchen.

Our PickKenwood, MultiPro Go FDP22.​130GY, Food Processor, for Chopping, Slicing, Grating, Pureeing and Kneading Dough, with Express Serve, 1.3L Bowl, Knife blade, 4mm Slicing/Grating Disk, 650 Watts, Grey

Kenwood, MultiPro Go FDP22.​130GY, Food Processor, for Chopping, Slicing, Grating, Pureeing and Kneading Dough, with Express Serve, 1.3L Bowl, Knife blade, 4mm Slicing/Grating Disk, 650 Watts, Grey

£49.004.6 (1,337)
Bosch MultiTalent 3 MCM3201BGB 800W 2.3L Food Processor with 2 speeds, 1 litre blender and/Slicing/Grating/Beating attachments. - Black

Bosch MultiTalent 3 MCM3201BGB 800W 2.3L Food Processor with 2 speeds, 1 litre blender and/Slicing/Grating/Beating attachments. - Black

£69.994.4 (1,763)

Our Recommendation

The Kenwood MultiPro Go FDP22.130GY is the better overall buy for most shoppers because it costs less, has a higher rating, and is easier to fit into a typical UK kitchen. At £49.00, it undercuts the Bosch by £20.99 while still covering the key tasks most households actually need: chopping, slicing, grating, pureeing, and kneading dough. The Bosch is more powerful and more feature-rich, but the Kenwood delivers stronger value and a more compact, user-friendly experience.

Detailed Comparison

Display

Neither of these food processors has a display or screen, so this category is effectively a tie. There’s no digital control panel, timer, or fancy LCD here — just straightforward, practical kitchen machines designed for everyday prep. If you’re used to appliance tech with touchscreens, neither will scratch that itch, but for most UK home cooks that simplicity is actually a plus.

Performance

Winner: Bosch MultiTalent 3 MCM3201BGB

The Bosch has the stronger motor on paper at 800W versus the Kenwood’s 650W, and that extra power matters when you’re pushing through denser ingredients or larger batches. Bosch also gives you two speeds, which makes it easier to control texture whether you’re making breadcrumbs, slicing veg, or blending soup. The Kenwood is still capable and benefits from its Express Serve function for fast prep straight into a bowl or pan, but the Bosch is the more versatile all-round performer, especially if you want a machine that can do a bit of everything with more headroom.

Build quality and design

Winner: Kenwood MultiPro Go FDP22.130GY

This is where the Kenwood shines for many kitchens. At 1.3L, it’s clearly designed to be compact and easy to store, which is a big deal if you’re short on worktop space or living in a flat with limited cupboard room. Kenwood’s MultiPro Go line is built around convenience, and the smaller footprint makes it easier to leave out without dominating the counter. The Bosch looks more like a traditional full-size processor, and while that can be useful, it also makes it bulkier and less nimble in a smaller UK kitchen. If you want a neat, no-fuss appliance that doesn’t take over the counter, Kenwood wins on design practicality.

Bowl capacity and attachments

Winner: Bosch MultiTalent 3 MCM3201BGB

Bosch takes this category comfortably thanks to its 2.3L bowl and included 1 litre blender. That larger bowl is a real advantage for family cooking, batch prep, and anything involving more than a couple of portions. The Bosch also includes slicing, grating, and beating attachments, making it a broader food-prep station. The Kenwood has a 1.3L bowl and covers chopping, slicing, grating, pureeing, and kneading dough, plus an Express Serve accessory and a 4mm slicing/grating disk. That’s a solid toolkit, but the Bosch simply gives you more capacity and more flexibility straight out of the box.

Price and value for money

Winner: Kenwood MultiPro Go FDP22.130GY

At £49.00, the Kenwood is £20.99 cheaper than the Bosch’s £69.99 price tag, and that’s a meaningful saving for a very similar category of appliance. The Kenwood also has the higher customer rating at 4.6/5 from 1,337 reviews, compared with Bosch’s 4.4/5 from 1,763 reviews. That suggests buyers are slightly happier with the Kenwood overall, even if Bosch has more reviews and more features. If your budget is tight and you mainly want reliable chopping, slicing, grating, and dough kneading, the Kenwood is the sharper value buy.

Game library/features

Winner: Bosch MultiTalent 3 MCM3201BGB

Thinking in terms of features, Bosch has the more complete package. The 800W motor, 2 speeds, 2.3L bowl, 1 litre blender, and multiple attachments make it the more feature-rich machine. It’s better suited to households that want one appliance to cover food processor duties plus blending, and it’s especially handy if you like making soups, smoothies, sauces, or larger meal-prep batches. The Kenwood’s Express Serve is a clever convenience feature, and its dough-kneading ability is useful, but Bosch offers the broader feature set overall.

Overall user experience

Winner: Kenwood MultiPro Go FDP22.130GY for smaller kitchens; Bosch MultiTalent 3 MCM3201BGB for bigger jobs

This is the closest category because the best user experience depends on how you cook. The Kenwood is easier to live with if you want a compact processor for quick weekday jobs: chop onions, grate cheese, slice cucumbers, make a small batch of hummus, or knead a bit of dough without faffing about. It’s also the better fit for a smaller UK kitchen where worktop space is precious and you want something that won’t be a pain to store. The Bosch is better if you cook in larger volumes or want a more capable all-in-one machine with a blender included. It feels more like a mini prep centre, which many families will appreciate.

Overall summary: the Bosch MultiTalent 3 is the better processor on features, power, and capacity, but the Kenwood MultiPro Go is the better value buy and the more sensible choice for most people with limited space. If you want the most capable machine, pick Bosch. If you want the best balance of price, reviews, and everyday practicality, the Kenwood is the smarter purchase.

Buy the Kenwood, MultiPro Go if...

Buy the Kenwood MultiPro Go if you want a compact food processor for a smaller worktop, a tighter budget, or mostly everyday prep like onions, cheese, veg, and dough. It’s also the better choice if you value a lower price and slightly better customer satisfaction scores over extra capacity. If you rarely need a blender and don’t batch-cook huge amounts, the Kenwood will feel easier to live with and less bulky in storage.

Buy the Bosch MultiTalent 3 if...

Buy the Bosch MultiTalent 3 if you regularly cook for a family, want a larger 2.3L bowl, or would genuinely use the included 1 litre blender. It’s the better pick if you want more power, more attachments, and a machine that can handle bigger prep jobs with less compromise. If you like making soups, sauces, smoothies, or larger meal-prep batches, the Bosch is the more capable all-rounder.

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