20% off Storewide (Food waste disposal $279.20) + Free Delivery @ NAMU NAMU

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OZONLY20

🌿 Launch Special – Limited Stock!

Celebrate the launch of NAMU NAMU with 20% off storewide.
Meet our electric kitchen composter — a clean, compact solution that turns food waste into natural fertilizer in just hours.

Who is NAMU NAMU for?
✔️ Apartment dwellers or anyone without easy composting access
✔️ Eco-conscious individuals — when traditional composting isn’t an option
✔️ Busy cooks, professionals, and parents
✔️ Small households (1–4 people) sensitive to smell and pests

đź’° Now only $279.20 (was $349)
🎟 Use code: OZONLY20 at checkout

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Comments

  • +5

    Pretty sure I’ve read a few articles about these (not this specific model - dunno about that) being junk?

    • +1

      I was pretty sure it was junk from the title! Composting just isn't that hard, and certainly doesn't need to be powered!

      • It does when you have it powered by AI

  • +3

    Serious question, but wouldnt it be cheaper to just go buy the bag of fertisiler?

    • +5

      It's more about making use of your kitchen scraps rather than just chucking them out.

      Pro tip - save the hundreds of dollars and get a worm farm. Will work much better than this. It's a bit dodgy calling what comes out of this after a few hours fertiliser too. Nothing has broken down by all the useful micro-organisms that actually makes the fertiliser beneficial for your garden.

      • -1

        If you chuck them out it still gets turned into compost

        • +2

          By being buried in a pile of anaerobic plastic landfill? It just gets turned into methane my dude - everyone should be composting.

          • @Hinee: Agree with everyone should be composting, but this device (which will be e-waste soon enough, and uses a tonne of electricity) isn't the solution for apartment dwellers.

            • @nugstar: I fully agree - and that's why I specifically said not to get one and instead buy a worm farm two comments up.

          • @Hinee: some councils collect organic waste in a separate bin and take it to a large scale composting facility

          • @Hinee: Mine goes into the green waste

  • +1

    Great for apartment dwellers. Make your own compost and chuck it on your, umm…. yeah…. in the bin it goes….

  • -1

    We totally understand this might not be for everyone. especially, those with a backyard or a worm farm setup. But for renters, apartment dwellers, or those with limited time and space, it’s a practical option that helps reduce food waste at home.

    We also want to clarify: it doesn’t produce finished compost like a 3-month outdoor process would. It creates a pre-compost material — dry, stable, and odorless — that can be mixed into soil or added to a compost bin to accelerate natural breakdown.

    In terms of energy, it uses roughly $0.25–$0.30 worth of electricity per cycle, or about $6 a month with regular use (5 times per week) comparable to a cup of coffee. We designed it for long-term use with quality components, aiming to reduce food waste without contributing to e-waste.

    Really appreciate the discussion — it helps us improve, and it’s great to see how much people care about real sustainability.

    • You are selling snake oil. You are selling a composter that you have just said DOESN'T ACTUALLY COMPOST. It doesn't do the thing you say it does. May I refer you to the ACCC's page on false or misleading claims?

      Also, wet food waste is just as much "pre-compost" as dried food waste - proper compost needs dry and wet feeds.

      You name it a composter, but then you effectively say "it dries out the food waste". Which still needs to go into soil or a composter to be any use at all. Kind of absolutely defeating the point for the people with limited space you are selling to.

      So to be clear you are selling a system that chops up and heats food waste, making your living area a sauna while you do it, and still leaves a waste stream you need to handle? At the cost of quite a lot of plastic and metal and a lot of money.

      You want to see composting happening? Encourage councils to institute green waste collection with proper hot composting system - get a product that is actually useful for gardens.

      • Hi, thanks for the detailed feedback — it's clear you care deeply about proper composting, and we absolutely respect that.

        To clarify: NAMU NAMU is not intended to replace traditional composting methods that involve microbial breakdown over weeks or months. We’ve always positioned it as an electric food waste recycler, and in many markets, the term “composter” is widely used for devices that dry and reduce food waste — but we understand how that can create confusion.

        We'll be changing the name to something more in line with products like Breville The FoodCycler or food waste disposers to avoid any confusion or misleading impressions.
        Thanks for your feedback — we genuinely appreciate it.
        https://www.davidjones.com/product/breville-the-foodcycler-f…

      • What NAMU NAMU does:
        - Dehydrates and grinds food waste
        - Reduces volume by up to 90%
        - Produces a dry, stable, and odorless material
        - Makes it easier and cleaner to handle food scraps in small homes, apartments, and urban settings

        The output is often called pre-compost — not finished compost. It can be added to garden soil, existing compost bins, or even disposed of with general waste while significantly lowering mess, smell, and methane generation. This isn't a magic garden solution — it's a cleaner, more compact way to deal with unavoidable kitchen waste, especially for people who can't compost outdoors or don’t have access to council green waste pickup.

        As for energy use: each cycle uses approx. 1kWh — less than a dishwasher — and the unit is sealed and insulated to prevent excess heat or noise. The exterior doesn’t overheat, and many customers find it quieter than expected.

        We’re open to improving our language and claims, and absolutely take consumer protection laws seriously — so if any description causes confusion, that’s something we’ll address. We appreciate your concern and passion for true sustainability.

    • A bread maker. Super interesting stuff.

  • At last, early version of MR Fusion.

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