Product Details

๐Ÿญ Manufacturer: Mill

๐Ÿ‹๏ธโ€โ™‚๏ธ Weight: 7.3 lbs

๐Ÿ“ Dimensions: 9.4 x 9.4 x 14.0 inches

๐Ÿ†” Model Number: EC03

๐Ÿ”ง Usage: Indoor

Mill Smart Kitchen Composter EC03 -- Overview

The Mill Kitchen Composter EC03 is an electric kitchen food recycler that processes food scraps into a dry, reduced-volume material suitable for composting. It uses a combination of heat, airflow, and a grinding mechanism to shrink food waste to roughly 20% of its original volume while reducing moisture and odor. The unit connects to Wi-Fi and pairs with the Mill app for cycle monitoring, filter change reminders, and usage data.

This review covers the EC03 specifically. The "EC" designation covers Mill's compact home units. It's worth distinguishing this from the larger Mill Farm model designed for commercial food service -- the EC03 is the residential version.

What It Actually Does

The basic cycle runs 3-8 hours and works in three phases: drying (removing moisture with heat), shrinking (reducing volume), and de-smelling (the carbon filter cycle that manages odors). You add scraps, close the lid, and start the cycle via the app or the top button. When the cycle completes, you have a dry, compacted material the app refers to as "Food Grounds" -- a coffee-ground-like powder that can go into garden soil or standard compost.

The volume reduction is the primary practical benefit. Food scraps in a typical household generate 1-2 liters of waste daily. After EC03 processing, that volume drops to under 400ml. This reduces bag changes, eliminates moisture-related odor from traditional compost bins, and extends the time between emptying.

Key Specs at a Glance

  • Capacity: 5L internal chamber
  • Noise level: 45 dB (rated)
  • Cycle time: 3-8 hours depending on load
  • Connectivity: Wi-Fi 2.4 GHz, app-controlled via the Mill app
  • Output: Dry, reduced-volume "Food Grounds"
  • Filter: Carbon filter, replacement every 3-6 months
  • Price: around $299-350 USD

App and Connectivity

The Mill app connects via Wi-Fi (2.4 GHz). The app shows cycle status, sends completion notifications, and logs usage data over time. You can start and stop cycles remotely, which is useful if you add scraps late and want to delay the start until you're asleep.

The Wi-Fi integration goes further than most kitchen appliances in this category. Mill tracks how much food waste the unit has processed cumulatively and provides a CO2 equivalent figure for food waste diverted from landfill. This data is basic but useful for households tracking sustainability metrics.

There is no native integration with Google Home, Alexa, or Apple HomeKit. The Mill app is the only control interface. Home Assistant community integrations don't exist for this product as of 2026.

Noise and Placement

The 45 dB rating is quiet for the category. Running it overnight is the standard approach most users land on after a few weeks of use -- the unit runs unattended and you empty it in the morning. Placed under a counter or on a countertop, it's quiet enough not to interfere with sleep in an adjacent room.

Ventilation matters for placement. The unit exhausts through a rear vent and needs at least 4 inches of clearance behind it. Enclosed cabinets with the door closed aren't suitable. Most countertop or open-shelf placements work fine.

What the EC03 Does Not Do

The EC03 doesn't produce finished compost. The output is a dry, partially broken-down material that needs time in outdoor soil or a traditional compost bin to finish. Calling the output "compost" is technically incorrect -- it's a pre-compost material that breaks down quickly once mixed with soil. For apartment dwellers without outdoor space, the output still needs to go somewhere (building compost programs, community gardens, or municipal green waste).

It also doesn't handle everything. Large bones, pits, and high-liquid items need to be excluded. The manufacturer provides a detailed accepted/not-accepted list in the app.

Mill EC03 vs Lomi by Pela

The most common alternative is Lomi (Lomi Classic at $499, Lomi 2 at similar pricing). Key differences: Lomi is marketed with three distinct output modes (dirt, Lomi-approved materials, and Lomi Certified Products). Mill's EC03 focuses on app connectivity and usage tracking. Noise levels are comparable. Both take 3-8 hours per cycle. Lomi doesn't require a Wi-Fi connection for operation; the Mill app adds monitoring but the unit also operates standalone.

For smart home users who want app-based monitoring and remote start, the Mill EC03 has an edge. For users who want mode flexibility for different compostable inputs, Lomi's modes are more specific.

Summary

The Mill Smart Kitchen Composter EC03 is a capable electric food recycler for households that generate significant food waste and want a smart home-adjacent appliance. The volume reduction is genuine, the Wi-Fi app integration works reliably, and the noise level is manageable overnight. The limitations are real: no certified compost output, no major smart home platform integration, and a filter replacement cost to factor in. At around $299-350, it's priced above basic food recyclers but below the subscription-based services. For households with garden composting access, the EC03 is a useful intermediary step between raw food scraps and finished compost.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does the Mill Kitchen Composter EC03 smell?

The EC03 uses a carbon filter and a dedicated de-smell cycle to manage odors during and after processing. Under normal use, the unit produces minimal odor. The filter needs replacement every 3-6 months depending on frequency of use -- Mill sells replacement filters directly. During the heat cycle, some mild food odor can escape briefly when the lid is opened, but the unit itself exhausts through the filter rather than into the room.

What can you put in the Mill Kitchen Composter EC03?

The EC03 accepts most food scraps: fruit and vegetable peels, leftovers, coffee grounds, eggshells, bread, meat, and dairy in small amounts. The manufacturer recommends against large bones, pits from stone fruits, and very oily items in large quantities. Liquid waste should be minimal -- the unit handles moisture in food scraps but isn't designed for soup or cooking liquid. It doesn't process non-food items like paper or packaging.

Is the Mill EC03 the same as the Lomi composter?

No. Lomi (by Pela) and Mill are separate products from different companies. Both are electric kitchen food recyclers but use different approaches. Mill's EC03 emphasizes Wi-Fi connectivity and app integration. Lomi focuses on modes for different output types (dirt, Lomi-approved, and certified compostables). Pricing and subscription models also differ. Both reduce food waste volume significantly through heat and grinding cycles.

How loud is the Mill Kitchen Composter EC03?

Mill rates the EC03 at approximately 45 decibels during operation, which is comparable to a quiet dishwasher or a running refrigerator. At that level it's audible in a quiet kitchen but not disruptive conversation. The cycle takes 3-8 hours depending on load, so most users run it overnight. Noise is the most common complaint in user reviews, specifically from the grinding phase near cycle end.