3L Electric Composter for Kitchen, Countertop Compost bin, One Touch Smart Model Handle Kitchen Waste, with Triple Grinding Blade, Carbon Filter, Auto-Cleaning, LED Touch Screen
Original price was: $349.99.$289.99Current price is: $289.99.







Price: $349.99 - $289.99
(as of Sep 28, 2025 20:20:24 UTC – Details)
MOLINGDUN Electric Composter for kitchen Turn today’s food scraps into tomorrow’s garden gold-without the mess, smell, or months of waiting. Our Electric Composter is a sleek, countertop powerhouse that quietly dehydrates,grinds, and cools organic waste in as little as 3-5 hours, reducing volume by up to 90 %. Drop in fruit peels, coffee grounds,even small bones; the carbon-filter lid locks odors in while smart sensors balance heat and airflow for pertfect, nutrient-rich compost every cycle. Energy-efficient whisper-quiet, and app-connected to track your eco-impact, it’s the effortless way to close the loop at home, office, or café-one touch,zero waste.
♻️3L Capacity: MOLINGDUN electric composter is big enough for a family of four, small enough to live on the counter. Crunch through 3 L of peels, bones and leftovers and shrink them down to a palm-full of nutrient-rich powder—over 90 % less waste, zero landfill guilt.
♻️Dual-Channel Active-Carbon System: Two independent vent lines, each packed with replaceable carbon cells, lock in odor molecules before they ever reach your kitchen. Breathe easy; the only thing you’ll smell is dinner cooking.
♻️Upgraded Triple Blade: The innovative stainless cutters arranged in three offset layers pulverize avocado pits, chicken bones and fibrous celery in minutes—no jamming, no “surprise chunks,” just consistent, soil-ready crumbles.
♻️Self-Clean Cycle: Add a splash of water, press “Clean.” The blades reverse-pulse while the chamber heats to 75 °C, heating every nook. Pour out the gray-water and you’re done.
♻️Self-Clean Cycle: Add a splash of water, press “Clean.” The blades reverse-pulse while the chamber heats to 75 °C, heating every nook. Pour out the gray-water and you’re done.
3 reviews for 3L Electric Composter for Kitchen, Countertop Compost bin, One Touch Smart Model Handle Kitchen Waste, with Triple Grinding Blade, Carbon Filter, Auto-Cleaning, LED Touch Screen
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Original price was: $349.99.$289.99Current price is: $289.99.

bclmb –
Nicer than expected, a few tips for satisfaction
I have to admit that I was skeptical when ordering this. I have another countertop composter that I like and it works well, but I wanted to try this out since I had something to compare it to – and during harvest season I really can use a second one.This composter is impressive – SO much quieter than my other one. It has two “cook” modes, one that is 8-12 hours long and one 4 hours long. The touch screen on top isn’t too difficult to figure out; however I do find that even though I tap the button to select the mode and then I select Start, sometimes it doesn’t start (or continue) and the lights flash. This has happened to me twice now, it’s most likely user error so I didn’t take off any stars for this. Once it starts, it hums quietly and even when it grinds down the larger foods, it’s still extremely quiet.I was surprised that this composter said not to put water in. My other one has you put about 2-3 tablespoons in before staring the cycle. This one does not require that. This one also does not suggest that you use a compost accelerator, though it would not hurt and could add healthy soil microbes. Basically what this unit does is grind and slow-cook/dry the debris so you can discard it (taking up less space in your trash and making it not smell) or you can put in the garden.Because the heat temperature on the 4 hour cycle is warmer, I doubt there is anything beneficial (like bacteria) left alive, but it would still mix well if you add nutritive ingredients. I believe the 8-12 hour cycle says it is better for garden soil.A couple of tips/notes about this unit. First – and I found this part extremely annoying – you have to use a screwdriver to open the carbon container, it has 4 Phillips style screws. My other one needs no tool to change out the filter, so right off the bat I didn’t like that. Since this composter works so well, I also did not take off any stars although I would have taken off a 1/2 star if I could, I believe the screws were not necessary, there are other ways to secure the lid.The next thing I don’t quite understand is why the carbon filter area has two compartments, and the instructions were not clear if you were supposed to fill both sides. I read the instructions several times and finally just fill both sides, since the instructions say “Empty the contents of the carbon bits into the filter container” (or whatever the actual wording was, this is what it stated.)There is a thin film that has a sticker on it which tells you to remove before use. I did that, then almost took off the other two little films but stopped, since those have instructions I didn’t want to remove, it’s good for reference. I’ve pictured all of this so hopefully you can better understand.The size of this composter is roughly the height of a bottle of wine (pictured for reference). It does not hold quite as much debris as my first composter but it’s still quite a lot. The size is about the same as my first one. I did not chop medium sized things like apple or pear cores, passion fruit or banana peels, but larger items I did reduce down a bit.It has a little button that releases the latch so you can open the lid. The carbon filter lid slides out horizontally, which it took me a minute to figure out. The divider inside the compost filter must be there for a reason, maybe I’ll figure that out after a while. Oh, one more thing -when you put the carbon filter box back in, be aware that it does go in only one way. I put it in backwards at first and had to pry it back out since I could not pull it, don’t force it down, it slides into place easily if in the right direction –> there should be a label stating this on the carbon box or lid.Overall, I am happy with this. It works well and it is quiet. And it makes compost out of food bits. It does what it is supposed to do and it looks nice. It does, however, take up space on the counter. That is something each person will have to weigh before purchasing. This until is a better price point than my first one, not sure on the quality/endurance since I have only been using it about 2 weeks, but so far, I really like it.
P. Kryske –
It actually works
I’ll start by saying I was actually surprised that this did work and the food scraps I put in it turned out looking like dirt after the process ended. I was skeptical but it worked. Their instruction manuals don’t really tell you a whole lot. They kind of give you a basic idea but I still had so many questions but I just shoved a bunch of scraps in and did the auto setting to see what would happen. Before you start, they provide you with carbon you have to add to a filter box. I don’t know if I’m supposed to fill this up completely or half way or what, they don’t say. They do say you have to replace it every 60 days or 500 hours so that could perhaps get annoying if you use this alot. Theirs is in pellet form but I guess you could use any carbon, maybe? They do a pretty decent job of telling you what you can compost. Their explanation of the main function is fine. The cleaning I guess, I understand, but they dont explain about the water outlet port. What does it do? Does it leak water? There is this round magnetic cover on the front that sort of fits on the cylinder, but it doesn’t seal it up and you cant put that on and close the lid so what’s the point of it. It’s things like this that made me give it 4 stars. That and it doesn’t hold that much stuff. It says 3 liters of volume, but my wife meal prepped lunches for the week and that filled up the entire thing. I guess you need to be using it every couple night otherwise.As far as how it works, put in the scraps, close the lid, hit the mode button once and it puts it in auto mode. That will run from 4 – 8 hours. I started it at 6pm and went to bed around 10pm. It was still running. It was on grind for about 3.5 hours or so and it had just switched to dry when I went to bed. When I work up in the morning it was complete and off. When I opened the lid, it flashed E5 so I assume it means it ran for 5 hours? Not sure. Either way, it really worked and I got dirt looking compost in 1 evening from the device. It’s not cheap, but hey I don’t have to deal with worms at least.
Emily –
Not A Composter
I was really hoping this would be a composter, but it’s not. It’s more of a food dehydrator crusher/grinder machine. That being said, it does that well. It’s easy to set up and operate. The cycle doesn’t take that long to dry. However I would not use the waste it produces directly on plants as it’s just dehydrated food, so I put it into my composter outside to compost. It does reduce the food waste volume down, but I’m not sure if the electrical expense and expense of the machine is worth that. If you live in an apartment and you have limited garbage space, this would definitely be handy.