The Best Matcha Sets for Beginners (And What You Actually Need to Start)

Whether you call it a matcha set, a matcha kit, or a matcha tea-making kit, most beginner sets include the same basic pieces: a whisk, a bowl, a scoop, and sometimes a sifter or whisk holder.
So the question is not always, “Which matcha set is technically the best?” It is: which one is easy enough to use, complete enough to start with, and pretty enough that you’ll actually leave it out and make matcha at home?
For this guide, I looked for beginner-friendly matcha sets that are practical, well-reviewed, and easy to use on day one. Then I organized the picks by style — minimal, contemporary, elevated, bold, ornate, playful, sculptural, and easiest everyday option.
The Jade Leaf set is my practical pick because I’ve been drinking Jade Leaf matcha for over a year, and their electric whisk is what made daily matcha feel realistic instead of fussy. The other picks are Amazon matcha sets chosen for different visual styles, so you can find one that fits your kitchen and your routine.
One note before you buy: most of these sets do not include matcha powder. You’ll still need a tin of ceremonial-grade or barista-grade matcha, like Jade Leaf, or another matcha you already love.
How I Chose These Matcha Sets
I chose these beginner matcha sets based on a few practical things: whether they include the tools you actually need, whether the bowl shape makes whisking and pouring easier, whether the setup is beginner-friendly, how easy it is to clean, and whether the style is something you’d realistically leave out on your counter.
Because most beginner matcha sets are functionally similar, I also organized the picks by kitchen style.
The best matcha set is the one that works well enough to use daily and looks good enough that you won’t hide it in a cabinet.
Quick Picks: Matcha Sets at a Glance
If you want the short version, here it is:
| Best For | Pick | Why It Stands Out | Approx. Price |
|---|---|---|---|
| Most Practical | Jade Leaf Modern Starter Set | Easiest daily setup because the electric whisk removes the bamboo-whisk learning curve. | $30 |
| Most Minimal | LezayXtra 5-Piece Set | Soft neutral pick with a rounded folded-rim bowl and two clean color options — cream or white — that feel calm, minimal, and easy to leave out. | $30 |
| Most Modern / Glass | DWEHIXBUY 7-Piece Glass Set | Clear glass pick with a larger 18 oz bowl, pouring spout, and full 7-piece setup — helpful if you want to see the matcha whisk smooth instead of guessing inside an opaque bowl. | $25 |
| Most Elevated | TANG PIN 5-Piece Set | Clean ceramic pick with muted color options, a 15 oz bowl, pouring spout, whisk stand, scoop, sifter, and a more refined look than the playful or ornate sets. | $30 |
| Most Bold | Doasuwish 7-Piece Set | Bolder patterned pick with a diamond-textured bowl, pouring spout, full 7-piece setup, and several color options. | $25 |
| Most Ornate | SIMPLETaste 7-Piece Ceramic Set | Ornate ceramic pick with floral/speckled styling, a pouring-spout bowl, matching holder, sifter, scoop rest, and tea towel. | $20 |
| Most Playful | YumiPLUS 5-Piece Set | Playful ceramic pick with measurement marks, a pouring-spout bowl, and the widest range of cute designs. | $23 |
| Most Sculptural | ChaseWind 8-Piece Floral Set | Most sculptural pick, with a flower-shaped bowl and soft color options that feel special without looking loud. | $25 |
Only the Jade Leaf Modern Starter Set doesn’t include a bowl — you’ll use one from your kitchen, or pick one up alongside. Every other pick includes a ceramic or glass bowl.
Keep reading for the full breakdown on each, or jump to What I’d Actually Buy for the decision tree.
Do You Actually Need a Matcha Set or Matcha Tea Making Kit?
You don’t.
You can make matcha with a small whisk or even a milk frother, a bowl from your kitchen, and a fine-mesh strainer you probably already have.
That said, a set becomes worth it when:
- you’re drinking matcha most mornings
- you want consistent results without thinking about it
- you want a setup you can leave on the counter so you’ll actually use it
It’s not a requirement. It’s just an upgrade.
What to Look for in a Matcha Set Kit
If you’re looking for a matcha set for beginners, start with the tools that remove friction: a whisk, a wide bowl, a scoop, and a sifter.
Most of these picks check the same basic boxes — real bamboo, decent ceramic, the basic tools you need.
The differences are in aesthetic and small details (spouts, dishwasher-safe ceramic, electric vs bamboo whisk).
Here’s what to look for in any matcha set so you can evaluate these picks — or any others you find:
Whisk type.
Bamboo whisks (chasen) make smoother matcha when used correctly. Electric whisks pull foam in seconds with no technique. Both work. The right one is whichever you’ll reach for at 7 a.m.
Bowl size and shape.
A wider, shallower bowl gives you room to whisk. A spout makes pouring less messy. Tiny ceremony-style bowls look traditional but make actually whisking harder.
What’s included.
None of the picks below include matcha powder — you’ll buy that separately regardless. Most include the bowl, but Jade Leaf Modern doesn’t (you’d use one from your kitchen).
Counter appeal.
You only use what you can see. The set you leave out is the one you’ll actually use.
Ease of cleaning.
Bamboo whisks need to dry on a holder. Electric whisks rinse under the tap in two seconds. Some ceramic bowls are listed as dishwasher safe, but the bamboo pieces should always be hand-washed. If dishwasher-safe cleaning matters to you, double-check the current listing before buying.
That’s it. Everything else is preference.
The 8 Best Matcha Sets for Beginners
You don’t need twenty options. You need a few that actually work — picked by what fits your kitchen.
I narrowed it to eight across distinct visual styles, all beginner-friendly, all with strong reviews. The order below moves from clean and practical → bold and decorative, so you can scan the labels and self-select.
Most Practical Matcha Set: Jade Leaf 3-Piece Modern
Jade Leaf Modern Matcha Starter Set

If you want the easiest daily matcha setup, the Jade Leaf Modern Matcha Starter Set is the practical anchor of this list.
It’s a 3-piece set plus handbook: electric whisk, stainless steel scoop, stainless steel tea sifter, and a step-by-step beginner guide. T
he electric whisk is what makes this work for daily use — no technique to learn, no bamboo prongs to baby, and it does double duty for cold foam if you also make iced coffee.
It doesn’t include a bowl, but that’s not really a problem — any small wide bowl from your kitchen works. (And if you use Jade Leaf’s latte-grade matcha mix, you don’t need to sift either, which simplifies the setup even more.)
- Electric whisk (USB-rechargeable)
- Stainless steel scoop and sifter
- Beginner handbook
- No bowl included
Pick this if: you want the easiest daily setup with an electric whisk that also handles cold foam.
Most Minimal Matcha Set: LezayXtra 5-Piece
LezayXtra Matcha Set

If you want a matcha set that reads more like calm neutral kitchenware than a traditional tea ceremony setup, the LezayXtra 5-Piece Matcha Set is the cleanest pick in the lineup.
The appeal is the rounded folded-rim bowl, simple matching pieces, and soft neutral color options. It comes in matte buttercream or white. It feels simple and styled enough to leave out, but still gives you the basic tools you need to start making matcha at home.
It’s a 5-piece set: matte buttercream ceramic bowl with a folded rim and spout, bamboo whisk, ceramic whisk holder, scoop, and stainless steel sifter. The bowl is dishwasher and microwave safe, which is rare for matcha sets — most ceramic bowls are hand-wash only.
Something to note: the matte glaze can scratch if you use metal tools directly in the bowl, so it’s bamboo-whisk-only (which is what you’d use anyway).
- Rounded ceramic bowl with folded rim
- Available in matte buttercream or white
- Bamboo whisk
- Matcha scoop
- Fine mesh sifter
- Matching whisk holder
Pick this if: you want the most neutral, minimal matcha set — soft, clean, and easy to leave out on the counter.
Most Modern Matcha Set: DWEHIXBUY 7-Piece Glass
DWEHIXBUY Glass Matcha Set

If you want to actually watch your matcha bloom and froth in real time, the DWEHIXBUY 7-Piece Glass Matcha Set is the only pick that lets you see it happen.
The clear glass bowl lets you see the matcha as you whisk, which is helpful when you’re new and trying to figure out whether the powder is actually smoothing out or still clumpy.
It’s also one of the fuller sets in the lineup. The 7-piece set comes with: a glass bowl with a pouring spout, bamboo whisk, scoop, whisk holder, ceramic scoop stand, cotton tea cloth, and a matcha sifter. The bowl is 510 ml (18 oz), which is larger than most — good if you make matcha lattes, since you can whisk and pour in the same bowl.
The tradeoff is that the glass bowl is not dishwasher safe, so this is better if you don’t mind hand-washing.
- Clear glass matcha bowl with pouring spout
- Larger 18 oz / 510 ml bowl
- Bamboo whisk
- Bamboo scoop
- Whisk holder
- Ceramic scoop stand
- Cotton tea cloth
- Fine mesh sifter
- Hand-wash only
Pick this if: you want a contemporary setup with a glass bowl that lets you see the matcha actually whisk smooth.
Most Elevated Matcha Set: TANG PIN 5-Piece
TANG PIN Matcha Set

If you want a matcha set that looks more elevated without getting ornate, the TANG PIN Matcha Set is the clean, refined pick in this lineup.
The appeal here is the clean ceramic look, muted color options, and simple matching setup. It feels more polished than the playful or decorative sets, but still beginner-friendly.
The set also comes in five designs — daisy, green, mottled green, white— which gives you a real shot at matching your kitchen. There is also a matte black with a Japanese inspired cat design.
- 15 oz ceramic matcha bowl with pouring spout
- Bamboo whisk
- Matcha scoop
- Whisk stand / chasen holder
- Fine mesh sifter
- Available in multiple muted color options
Pick this if: you want a clean, elevated-looking matcha set that feels more refined than cute, ornate, or colorful.
Most Bold Matcha Set: Doasuwish 7-Piece Diamond
Doasuwish diamond Matcha Set

If you want a matcha set with more color and pattern, the Doasuwish Diamond Matcha Set is the boldest pick in this lineup.
The appeal is the diamond-textured ceramic bowl, matching whisk holder, pouring spout, and full 7-piece setup. It comes in several color options — including matcha green, black, purple, white, and pink — so it feels more statement-making than the clean neutral sets. The accessories come in matching hues for a coordinated setup.
A few practical notes beyond the look: a 128-prong whisk (versus the standard 80), a wider base that means less splatter when you whisk, and a beak-shaped pouring spout. The ceramic bowl is dishwasher and microwave safe; the bamboo whisk still needs hand-rinsing.
- Ceramic matcha bowl with diamond-textured pattern
- Pouring spout
- Bamboo whisk
- Bamboo scoop
- Scoop rest
- Whisk holder
- Fine mesh sifter
- Tea towel
- Dishwasher safe
- Multiple color options, including matcha green, black, purple, white, and pink
Pick this if: you want a more colorful, patterned matcha set that feels coordinated and decorative without going floral.
Most Ornate Matcha Set: SIMPLETaste 7-Piece Ceramic
SIMPLETaste Ceramic Matcha Set

If you want a set with decorative detail, like raised floral texture on the bowl and matching ceramic accessories — the SIMPLETaste Ceramic Matcha Set is the most ornate of the picks.
The pink version has raised floral details and a softer, more feminine look, while the green version is more earthy and speckled. Both come with the same core 7-piece setup: bowl, bamboo whisk, whisk holder, scoop, scoop rest, sifter, and tea towel.
This is the “pretty enough to leave out” pick — more decorative than practical-minimal, but still complete enough for a beginner setup.
- Ceramic matcha bowl with pouring spout
- Available in pink floral or green speckled
- Bamboo whisk
- Bamboo scoop
- Scoop rest
- Whisk holder
- Fine mesh sifter
- Tea towel
Pick this if: you want a decorative matcha set with floral or speckled detail and more personality than the minimal ceramic options.
Most Playful Matcha Set: YumiPLUS 5-Piece
YumiPLUS Matcha Set

If you want a matcha set that feels more playful than minimal or elevated, the YumiPLUS Matcha Set is the cute pick in this lineup.
The sakura version has pink cherry blossom details, but the real appeal is the range of designs. It also comes in gray, pink, pink love with hearts, pumpkin orange with white pumpkin illustrations, and white.
The bowl has a pouring spout and measurement marks inside, which makes it useful for lattes without feeling too serious.
- Ceramic matcha bowl with pouring spout
- Measurement marks inside the bowl
- Bamboo whisk
- Bamboo scoop
- Whisk holder
- Fine mesh sifter
- Available in multiple playful designs, including sakura, gray, pink, pink love heart print, pumpkin, and white
Pick this if: you want a cute, playful matcha set with measurement marks and more personality than the clean neutral options.
Most Sculptural Matcha Set: ChaseWind 8-Piece Floral
ChaseWind Matcha Set

If you want a matcha set that feels more like a pretty countertop piece, the ChaseWind Floral Matcha Set is the most sculptural pick in this lineup.
The flower-shaped bowl is the main draw. It feels softer and more decorative than a standard round matcha bowl.
You get the petal-shaped bowl, bamboo whisk, ceramic whisk holder, bamboo scoop, scoop rest, fine mesh sifter, spoon, and a tea cloth. Lead-free ceramic, dishwasher and microwave safe.
It also comes in several colorways, which makes it easier to match your kitchen palette or buy as a gift.
- Flower-shaped ceramic bowl
- Bamboo whisk
- Whisk holder
- Bamboo scoop
- Scoop rest
- Fine mesh sifter
- Spoon
- Tea towel
- Multiple soft colorways, including beige, beige & pink, beige & green, beige & blue, pink, green, and blue
Pick this if: you want an understated-but-special matcha set with a flower-shaped bowl, soft color options, and enough texture to feel pretty without looking loud.
Matcha Set Price Range: What You’re Actually Paying For
Beginner matcha kits land in a tighter price range than most kitchen tools. Here’s the honest breakdown:
Under $15. Usually missing pieces — no sifter, no whisk holder, or a cheap bamboo whisk that frays in a month. Skip unless you only need one specific tool.
$15–$25. The sweet spot. Full 5–8 piece sets with everything you need, decent ceramic, real bamboo. Most of the picks above sit here.
$25–$30. Same setup as the sweet spot, but you’re paying for design — a nicer colorway, a spout bowl, a premium build, or a glass bowl. Worth it if the aesthetic is part of why you’ll use it.
$50+. Design-first sets from coffee-tool brands or imported ceremonial-grade kits. You’re paying for the brand, not better matcha. Skip unless that matters to you.
Most of what’s worth buying sits between $20 and $30.
Bamboo Whisk vs Electric Matcha Whisk
This is the actual decision most beginners get stuck on.
A traditional bamboo whisk makes smoother matcha when used correctly. It also has a learning curve — you whisk in a W or M motion, not a circle, and the prongs fray over time. They need to dry on a whisk holder so they hold their shape.
An electric matcha whisk does the same job in a few seconds with no technique. The result isn’t quite as silky as a perfect bamboo whisk — but it’s smoother than a bad bamboo whisk, and a bad bamboo whisk is what most beginners actually make.
The other thing nobody mentions: the bamboo whisk is the annoying part to clean. You rinse, shake out, and dry it on the holder every time. The electric whisk gets rinsed under the tap in two seconds.
If you want the slower, hands-on version of matcha, get the bamboo. If you want it done in ten seconds with less cleanup, get the electric. Either works.
Do You Need a Bamboo Whisk or Can You Use a Milk Frother?
A handheld milk frother works fine for matcha. It won’t give you the same silky texture as a proper bamboo whisk, but it’s faster, cheaper, and easier to clean.
If you already have a milk frother for cold foam, you don’t need a separate matcha whisk to get started. Sift your matcha first — a frother won’t break up clumps the way a bamboo whisk will.
If you want a dedicated tool without the full set, the Jade Leaf Electric Matcha Whisk is the standalone version of the whisk that comes in the Modern Starter Set above.
My Final Recommendation: Which Matcha Set I’d Actually Buy
If I were buying one of these matcha sets for myself, I’d personally choose the ChaseWind Floral Set.
I already have a frother, so I don’t need the most practical option. I’d rather have a set that feels beautiful enough to leave out — not loud or overly decorative, but still special.
The ChaseWind bowl has that understated detail I like: soft colors, a sculptural flower shape, and texture that makes it feel more intentional than a plain white bowl. That’s usually what I’m drawn to in kitchen pieces: white-on-white, tone-on-tone, or simple shapes with one interesting detail. Not “look at me, I’m different,” but not boring either.
If I were starting from scratch and purely for daily practicality, I’d get the Jade Leaf Modern Starter Set and grab a tin of their matcha at the same time. The electric whisk is the easiest option, especially if you want matcha to become a normal weekday habit without learning bamboo whisk technique. Plus, it does double duty for cold foam if you also make iced coffee.
If I were buying for style, taste, and a quality set that meets daily matcha needs, here’s how to pick:
- If you want clean and minimal — neutral kitchen, modern aesthetic — go LezayXtra buttercream.
- If you want to watch your matcha bloom in real time, the DWEHIXBUY glass set is the only one that lets you see it happen.
- If you want premium-feeling ceramic with color options, go TANG PIN.
- If you want strong color and architectural pattern — or you’ve been looking for a black or royal purple matcha bowl that doesn’t exist anywhere else — the Doasuwish set is the bold pick.
- If you want something decorative with detail — pink with embossed flowers or green with speckled paint — the SIMPLETaste ceramic set is the pick.
- If you want playful and gift-ready with a pretty pattern like cherry blossoms, the YumiPLUS Cherry Blossom set has the right energy.
- If you want a piece that doubles as decor, like a flower-shaped bowl — the ChaseWind Floral set is the boldest pick.
Choose the others based on your kitchen style. That’s the whole decision tree.
How This Fits Into Your Routine
A matcha set only works if it stays simple.
The whole point of making matcha at home is that it’s faster, cheaper, and easier than going out for one. The setup should support that — not turn it into a project.
You’re still just:
- sifting matcha into a bowl
- adding hot (not boiling) water
- whisking until smooth
- pouring over milk or ice
The set isn’t doing anything magical. It’s just removing the friction that would make you skip the whole thing.
What to Make Once You Have One
Once you have your setup, you can rotate without changing the base method:
- matcha smoothie for a no-whisk-required version
- banana bread matcha latte for a slower morning
- matcha latte with strawberry cold foam for the upgrade version
- iced matcha latte for daily use
- hot matcha latte for cold mornings
Same setup. Different finishes.
If you want the full breakdown on the matcha I use, my Jade Leaf matcha review walks through grades and what’s actually worth the price.
Beginner Matcha Set FAQs
What should be included in a beginner matcha set?
At minimum: a whisk (bamboo or electric), a scoop, and a sifter. A bowl is helpful but not required — any small, wide bowl from your kitchen will work. None of the sets above include matcha powder; you’ll buy that separately.
What comes in a matcha tea making kit?
A matcha tea making kit usually includes a bamboo whisk, scoop, bowl, and sometimes a sifter or whisk holder. Some beginner kits include matcha powder, but most of the matcha sets in this guide do not, so you’ll need to buy matcha separately.
How do you use a matcha whisk set?
Sift 1–2 grams of matcha into your bowl. Add about 2 ounces of hot (not boiling) water. Whisk in a quick W or M motion — or use an electric whisk — until smooth and frothy. Then pour over milk or ice.
Can you make matcha without a bamboo whisk?
Yes. An electric whisk or even a handheld milk frother will work fine. The bamboo whisk gives a smoother texture when used correctly, but it’s not required.
Is a matcha tea making kit worth it?
If you’re drinking matcha regularly, yes. A good kit removes the friction of finding the right tools and keeps the process consistent. If you’re just trying matcha for the first time, a basic electric whisk and a sifter is enough to start.
Where can I buy a matcha set?
The best matcha sets on Amazon span a wide range — most of the picks above sit between $20 and $30. Jade Leaf sells direct on their site and is the brand I trust most for beginners.
How often should you replace a matcha whisk?
A bamboo whisk lasts six months to a year with regular use. When the prongs start to fray or break, replace it. Electric whisks last years if you don’t drop them.
Do I need ceremonial-grade matcha to use a starter set?
No. Culinary-grade is fine for lattes and works well with any of the sets above. Ceremonial-grade is smoother and less bitter for drinking straight, but you don’t need it to start.
Final Thought
A matcha set isn’t something you need to make matcha at home.
But it’s one of those small upgrades that turns something you might do occasionally into something you’ll actually keep doing.
That’s what actually matters.








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