Matcha Whisk Set: The Complete 6-Piece Kit
Most people who give up on homemade matcha do it because something was missing: no sieve, so the tea clumped; no proper bowl, so whisking splashed; no holder, so the whisk curled shut within a month. We put this set together so none of that happens. Every piece below is the one we actually reach for, tested the way we describe on our how we test page.
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The 6 pieces, with exact dimensions
| Piece | Material | Dimensions | Job |
|---|---|---|---|
| Matcha bowl (spouted) | Glazed ceramic | 14.0 cm wide with spout · Ø 13.0 cm · H 8.0 cm | Whisking and pouring |
| Bamboo whisk (chasen) | Natural bamboo | 10.66 cm, ships in a storage tube | Frothing the tea |
| Whisk holder | Glazed ceramic | H 7.5 cm · 3.0 cm opening · 5.0 cm base | Drying and shaping the chasen |
| Sieve | Stainless steel | Ø 7.0 cm mesh · 19.0 cm total length | Sifting out clumps |
| Teaspoon | Natural bamboo | 16.0 × 3.0 cm | Scooping powder from the tin |
| Scoop (chashaku) | Curved bamboo | 17.78 cm | Traditional measuring |
The spouted bowl is the piece people underrate
Most matcha bowls make you choose: whisk in the bowl and drink from it, or transfer your tea with a spoon and lose half the foam. This bowl has a pouring spout built into the rim, so you whisk in a wide, stable 13 cm bowl — enough room for a full wrist motion without splashing — then pour cleanly over milk or ice for a latte. At 8 cm tall it sits low enough to whisk with your forearm level, which matters more for foam than most people expect. If you drink your matcha straight, it works as a classic drinking bowl too.
The chasen and its ceramic holder work as a pair
The bamboo whisk arrives protected in a plastic tube, carved with the fine springy tines that create matcha's signature microfoam. Bamboo is a natural fiber, though, and it dries in whatever position you leave it. That is why the set includes a matching 7.5 cm ceramic holder: after rinsing, the whisk rests head-down over the rounded dome, air circulates through the tines, and they dry in their open bloom shape instead of curling inward. The supplier's own line is that this one habit is what extends a whisk's working life, and our testing agrees. We wrote a full page on the holder and its Japanese name, the kuse naoshi, in our chasen holder guide.
Sieve, teaspoon, and chashaku: the preparation trio
Matcha powder clumps in the tin — that is normal, and no amount of whisking fully breaks an unsifted clump. The stainless steel sieve has a 7 cm mesh on a 19 cm frame, so it rests across the 13 cm bowl mouth with room to spare while you press powder through with the bamboo teaspoon. The 16 cm teaspoon doubles as your everyday scoop, and the 17.78 cm curved chashaku is the traditional bamboo measure, carved in the classic long, narrow profile. If you have never used one, our chashaku matcha scoop guide shows the grip and the level-scoop technique in about two minutes of reading.
Everything arrives in a kraft gift box with molded foam holding each piece — the packaging shows up constantly in buyer photos, usually with a note of relief that the ceramic survived shipping. It makes the set genuinely giftable without extra wrapping; our matcha gift set guide covers who this suits best.
Pick your color
Viewing: Cyan
You'll pick your color at the secure checkout step. The preview here is just so you can decide before you click.
What makes a good matcha set — and when a set beats buying separately
When we compare sets, we look for the four working pieces above plus honest materials: glazed ceramic that wipes clean, natural bamboo rather than nylon, stainless steel rather than tin mesh. This set adds two bamboo scoops on top of the core four, and skips the things that usually pad out "deluxe" kits — trays you never use, tins that arrive empty, whisks in sizes nobody asked for.
Then there is the math. Here is the honest version, using our own catalog as the reference point:
| Buying route | Cost | What you get |
|---|---|---|
| Ceramic whisk holder alone (our matcha whisk holder) | $14.99 | 1 piece |
| The remaining 5 pieces, at set pricing | $35.00 (about $7.00 per piece) | Bowl, chasen, sieve, teaspoon, chashaku |
| Complete 6-piece set | $49.99 $79.99 | All six, in matching glaze, gift-boxed |
Put differently: a ceramic whisk holder alone sells for $14.99 in our shop, so the set effectively prices the spouted bowl, the chasen, the sieve, and both bamboo scoops at about $7.00 each. Sourcing those pieces one by one from specialty tea retailers almost always costs more, and you end up with glazes that do not match.
The honest flip side: if you already own a bowl and a whisk you like, do not buy the set. The standalone ceramic matcha whisk holder at $14.99 fixes the drying problem on its own, comes in 12 glazes instead of 5, and that is the smarter purchase. Sets are for people starting from zero or replacing mismatched pieces — that is exactly what a matcha starter kit should be.
How we tested this set: 28 bowls in 14 days
Before listing the set, Naomi ran our standard two-week protocol on a Cyan sample: two bowls of matcha per day for 14 days, 28 preparations total, with the chasen rinsed and rested on the holder after every session. It is a modest test, but it is ours, and it catches the failures that matter in month one.
| Check | Method | Result |
|---|---|---|
| Glaze wear and staining | Inspected bowl interior under daylight after each week | No crazing, no tea staining after 28 preparations |
| Spout pour | Poured 28 lattes over milk and ice | Clean cutoff; no dribble down the bowl's outer wall |
| Sieve fit | Measured against the bowl mouth | 19 cm frame rests across the 13 cm opening with margin on both sides |
| Whisk shape | Chasen dried head-down on the holder daily, photographed weekly | Tines held their open bloom through day 14 |
Full protocol, including what would make us pull a product, is on our how we test page.
This set, and the matcha habit around it
verified buyer orders of this 6-piece set, rated 4.9/5 across our supplier network
— supplier order records, 2026
unedited photo reviews submitted by verified buyers of the set
— supplier review records, 2026
US matcha tea market revenue in 2024 — daily home preparation is what drives it
— Grand View Research, 2024
projected annual growth rate of the US matcha tea market from 2025 to 2033
— Grand View Research, 2025
Matcha starter kit or matcha ceremony set?
A formal Japanese matcha ceremony set is a different animal: specific seasonal bowls, a lacquered tea caddy, cloths and their folding rituals, often heirloom pricing. If that is your path, we genuinely respect it — and you will likely buy those pieces individually from specialist makers over years. What this set gives you is the same daily mechanics the ceremony refined: sift with the sieve, measure with the 17.78 cm chashaku, whisk in a wide bowl, and rest the whisk head-down on its ceramic holder so it keeps its shape. Our guide on how to use a matcha whisk covers the wrist motion, and the whisk care routine lives in how to clean a matcha whisk and how to store a matcha whisk.
Rated 4.9/5 across 4,000+ verified orders
These are verbatim reviews from verified buyers of this exact set, with their own unedited photos. The color noted under each photo is the glaze visible in the buyer's picture. More on the reviews page.

"In love, quick shipping and it's beautiful. Works great and sturdy. Comes in nice packaging with foam and a box"
— Irene, verified buyer (US) · Cyan

"great set for making matcha tea. very satisfied with it. arrived quickly."
— Verified buyer (Australia) · White

"Truly amazing set. Very high quality, thank you!"
— Iris, verified buyer (Hungary) · Cyan

"High quality ceramic. Colors are true to photo."
— Ana, verified buyer (Portugal) · Light Cyan

"I recommend it. It's really beautiful!"
— Jana, verified buyer (Czechia) · Cyan
Unedited photos from verified buyers.
Ready to make real matcha at home?
Six matched pieces, one box, $49.99 instead of $79.99.
You'll pick your color at the secure checkout step.
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Matcha whisk set questions, answered
Is this matcha whisk set good for beginners?
Yes. It was assembled as a matcha starter kit: the sieve, teaspoon, and chashaku handle preparation, the spouted bowl and bamboo chasen handle whisking and pouring, and the ceramic holder keeps the whisk in shape between uses. You add matcha powder and hot water; everything else is in the box.
What exactly comes in the 6-piece set?
A ceramic matcha bowl with pouring spout (13 cm diameter, 8 cm tall), a 10.66 cm bamboo chasen whisk in a storage tube, a matching 7.5 cm ceramic whisk holder, a stainless steel sieve with a 7 cm mesh, a 16 cm bamboo teaspoon, and a 17.78 cm curved bamboo chashaku scoop.
How do I choose my color?
The set comes in five glazes: Cyan, White, Light Cyan, Blue, and Pink. You will pick your color at the secure checkout step, right after clicking the order button. The bowl and whisk holder arrive in matching glaze; the bamboo and steel pieces are identical across colors.
Does the set include matcha powder?
No. This is a tools-only set, which is deliberate: matcha powder is best bought fresh, in small tins, from a tea seller you trust. The set covers every tool you need to prepare it — sifting, measuring, whisking, resting the whisk — so your budget goes to better powder.
How should I care for the bamboo whisk?
Rinse the chasen in warm water right after whisking, without soap, then let it air-dry resting head-down on the ceramic holder so the tines keep their open shape. Our guides on how to clean a matcha whisk and how to store a matcha whisk walk through the full routine.
Written by Naomi Carter, Sourcing & Testing Lead at KujiMatcha — more about her selection process on our about page.