The Ganiza GJ10 offers 350 watts in a 6-pound frame at $66.49, making it one of the lighter, more affordable options in this category. Its 3.8-star average from 151 reviews is at the lower end of acceptable, signaling a meaningful minority of buyers ran into issues.
Budget buyers who want a lightweight masticating juicer and can accept a below-average satisfaction rating in exchange for a low price.
Skip if
You want 4.0 stars or better from a broad reviewer base, or you plan to juice dense root vegetables that demand a more powerful motor.
Power 350 W
Speeds 1
Jar / bowl material Abs
Blade material Stainless Steel
Finish Uncoated
Color Black Silver
Priced 66% below the category median ($192.93 across 28 tracked models)
Power of 350 W - higher than 91% of the 28 models we track
Weight of 6.0 lb - lighter than 88% of the 28 models we track
Pros
350-watt motor is notably higher than typical budget masticating juicer specs
Weighs just 6 pounds, easy to move and store
Compact 14 x 6.65 x 12 inch footprint
Priced at $66.49, among the lowest in the masticating category
Stainless steel blade material at this price point is a positive
Cons
3.8-star average from 151 reviews is below the category average
ABS housing is lower-grade plastic construction
No published jar capacity, making pour volume unknown
At 3.8 stars, a significant portion of buyers reported dissatisfaction
Our scorecard
3.8/5overall
Owner rating3.8/5
3.8 average across 151 owner ratings
Popularity3.2/5
151 owner reviews, more than most models here
The overall score is owner satisfaction weighted by how many reviews back it, so a high rating from few reviews counts for less. The bars below show where this model stands against the other countertop and personal blenders, immersion blenders, food processors, and masticating, centrifugal and citrus juicers we track in this category on price, popularity and size. Context, not marks against it, and our read of the data, not a lab test.
Specifications
Power
350 W
Speeds
1
Jar / bowl material
Abs
Blade material
Stainless Steel
Finish
Uncoated
Color
Black Silver
Dimensions
14 X 6.65 X 12 In
Weight
6.0 lb
Overview
['The GJ10 is powered by a 350-watt motor, which is higher than the 150 to 200 watts common to most budget masticating juicers. That extra wattage in a 6-pound body could mean faster extraction, though the ABS bowl housing is typical of budget-tier construction. Dimensions are 14 by 6.65 by 12 inches, a compact countertop profile.', 'At $66.49 it is among the least expensive masticating juicers in the category, and 151 reviews is a solid enough sample to take the 3.8-star rating seriously. That score sits at the floor of what most buyers consider acceptable for a regular-use appliance. A meaningful share of reviewers flagged problems, though the majority found it serviceable.', 'If keeping costs under $70 is the priority and you understand you are trading some reliability for price, the GJ10 is worth considering. For anyone planning daily use or juicing tougher produce consistently, spending more for a higher-rated model from Omega or another established brand is likely the smarter long-term call.']
Performance notes
The GJ10 runs on a 350-watt motor, the highest wattage in this review set after the outlier Kuvings model. Combined with the single-speed auger and stainless steel blade, it should handle soft to medium produce without difficulty. ABS jar construction is common at this price but less durable than Ultem or Tritan. The 6-pound weight makes it notably portable. No jar capacity data is available, so output volume per batch is not confirmed.
What buyers say
A 3.8-star average across 151 reviews is a caution signal. It is not a failed product, and many buyers found it functional, but the score indicates a higher-than-normal rate of problems. Common patterns at this rating level tend to involve build quality, leaking, or premature failure, though specific issues cannot be confirmed from rating data alone. Buyers should weigh the low price against the below-average satisfaction score.
Does the 350-watt motor make the GJ10 better than 150-watt competitors?
More wattage can mean faster extraction and better handling of hard produce, but motor power is only one factor. Auger design, screen quality, and build consistency all affect real-world output. The GJ10's 3.8-star rating despite its higher wattage suggests raw power does not compensate fully for construction or design limitations that buyers ran into.
Is the Ganiza GJ10 worth it at $66.49?
It depends on your expectations. At $66.49 with a 350-watt motor and stainless steel blades, the hardware specs are decent for the price. The 3.8-star average from 151 buyers is the main reservation. If you want a proven, higher-rated option in the under-$80 range, the Fretta F5000 at $79.98 with 4.5 stars from 655 reviews is a more confidence-inspiring choice.
What produce works best in a 350-watt slow juicer?
A 350-watt masticating juicer handles soft fruits like oranges, apples, and pears well, along with leafy greens. The higher wattage compared to typical 150-watt models should provide more torque for moderately fibrous vegetables like celery and cucumbers. Very dense root vegetables like whole raw beets may still challenge a budget-tier build regardless of wattage.
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