Espresso Machine Has No Pressure? Here’s What to Check First
Your espresso machine runs but produces little or no crema — just weak, watery coffee dripping out without any force.
Low or no pressure is usually a grind size problem, a scale buildup issue, or a portafilter seal issue. All three are fixable at home.
Find your problem in the table below. Click the button and it will take you straight to the right fix.
Always let the machine cool completely before touching the portafilter, group head, or steam wand. Hot espresso machines hold water under pressure — even a small splash of steam can cause a serious burn.
| What you see | What it means | Go to |
|---|---|---|
| Thin stream, no crema, weak shot | Grind too coarse, no resistance | Fix 1 → |
| Machine strains, tiny flow | Over-tamped or grind too fine | Fix 2 → |
| Pressure was fine, now it’s gone | Scale buildup blocking flow | Fix 3 → |
Adjust Your Grind — It’s Probably Too Coarse
💰 FreeEspresso requires a very fine grind to create enough resistance for the pump to build pressure. If the grind is too coarse — like regular drip coffee — water rushes through in seconds with no resistance, producing a pale, watery shot and zero crema.
Time your shots with a phone stopwatch. If it flows in under 20 seconds — grind finer. Over 35 seconds and nearly stopped — grind coarser.
Fix Over-Tamping or an Overpacked Portafilter
💰 FreeIf you pack the grounds too tightly or overfill the basket, the pump can’t push water through at all. The machine strains, makes loud noises, and produces almost nothing — or it bypasses and leaks around the portafilter seal.
Level the grounds in the basket by sweeping with your finger before tamping — a flat, even puck produces consistent pressure and better extraction.
Descale to Remove Mineral Buildup in the Pump
💰 Under $15Scale deposits build up inside the boiler and internal tubing just like in a kettle. When the scale gets thick enough, it restricts water flow to the point where the pump can’t generate proper pressure — no matter how perfect your grind is.
Use filtered water in your espresso machine — it dramatically slows scale buildup and can extend the time between descaling from monthly to quarterly.
🤔 Still Not Working After All the Fixes?
If you’ve dialed in the grind, checked the portafilter seal, and descaled — and there’s still no pressure — the pump itself may have failed. Home espresso machine pumps (usually vibratory pumps) last 3–7 years with regular use.
A pump replacement runs $20–$40 in parts and is doable on most machines with a YouTube guide. If the machine is more than 8 years old or was under $100 new, replacement is usually the better call.
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I write every guide myself so people don’t throw away perfectly fixable machines. If this helped you today, a coffee means a lot.