The Dedica Arte earns its place by being the cheapest respectable entry into real pump espresso and the only one that fits in six inches of counter. The thermoblock heats up in about forty seconds, the Arte revision replaced the old panarello with a proper manual steam wand that can — with practice — produce latte-art-adjacent milk, and the whole machine costs about as much as three weeks of café lattes. For a dorm, an office, or a curious beginner, that is a compelling package. Understand what you are buying, though. Out of the box, the pressurized baskets fake crema and flatten flavor differences; the machine only shows its potential once you buy a non-pressurized basket, a decent burr grinder, and a proper tamper — at which point your 'cheap' setup costs three times the machine. The tiny drip tray fills fast and taller cups do not fit without removing it, the lightweight body skates around the counter while you lock the portafilter, and the steam wand runs out of puff on larger milk quantities. Shot temperature stability is also mediocre, so back-to-back doubles vary. As a stepping stone that teaches you whether you care about espresso, it is excellent. As a destination, it is not.
Slim sub-6-inch footprint fits any kitchen Arte's manual steam wand can texture real milk Very affordable entry into pump espresso Needs a non-pressurized basket, grinder, and tamper to make genuinely good espresso Tiny drip tray, light body, and weak steam capacity Mediocre temperature stability between shots