Short answer: if you're choosing between these two magnetic measuring spoon sets, get the Spring Chef. I've used both for six weeks in my own kitchen, one set clipped to a small magnetic strip on the fridge and one living loose in a utensil drawer, and the difference in magnet strength and build quality is not close. BIDFUL isn't a scam set or a total dud. It's just a noticeably lighter-duty version of the same idea, and once you've felt the two side by side over a stretch of real cooking, you can tell exactly where the money went and where it didn't.

I'm a nurse who cooks real dinners on real weeknights between twelve-hour shifts, not styled photos for a blog, so I judge kitchen tools by whether they survive a busy household. Both sets make the same basic pitch: stainless steel measuring spoons with magnets built into the handles, so instead of digging through a drawer or losing the quarter-teaspoon behind the flour canister, the spoons snap together into one neat stack or stick to a magnetic strip on the fridge. It's a genuinely useful idea, and it solves a problem I've had in every kitchen I've ever cooked in, which is measuring spoons scattering to four different corners of a drawer the second you close it.

The question that actually matters is which set delivers on that promise after weeks of normal use, not just in the unboxing video. So I bought both sets myself at full price specifically for this comparison, ran them through the same six weeks of meals, breads, and marinades, and paid close attention to the three things that break down first on cheap kitchen tools: magnet strength, how the handle joint holds up in the dishwasher, and whether the printed measurements stay readable after repeated washing. Here's exactly what I found, spoon by spoon.

Spring ChefBIDFUL Magnetic Measuring Spoons
Price (current)$11.99$9.49
Material18/8 stainless steel, one-piece stamped constructionStainless steel with a bonded plastic magnet cap
Magnet StrengthStrong, holds through a hard counter bumpModerate, separates with a firm shake
Spoon Sizes Included6 (tbsp, 1/2 tbsp, tsp, 1/2 tsp, 1/4 tsp, 1/8 tsp)5 (tbsp, tsp, 1/2 tsp, 1/4 tsp, 1/8 tsp)
Engraved MarkingsDeep laser-etched, still legible after washingShallow stamped, fading noticeable after a month
Dishwasher SafeYes, top rack, no rust after repeated washesYes, top rack, but magnet cap can loosen over time
Rating (Amazon)4.9 stars, 49,542 reviews4.3 stars, roughly 3,800 reviews
WarrantyLifetime replacement guarantee12-month limited warranty
Storage RingIncluded, doubles as a hanging loopNot included

How I Tested Both Sets

I didn't just measure flour with these for six weeks and call it a review. I used both sets for baking, for cooking, and for the small daily measuring tasks that actually wear a tool down, things like scooping baking soda for cleaning, portioning coffee grounds, and measuring out cough syrup doses for my kids when they're sick. Each set got clipped to the same spot on the fridge for half the test and then moved into a drawer for the other half, so both got equal exposure to the two most common ways people actually store these things.

For the magnet test specifically, I stacked each set on its side on the counter and gave the counter a firm bump with my palm, the kind of jostle that happens constantly when you're prepping dinner one-handed with a load of laundry running in the next room. I ran that test six times per set, on three separate days, so it wasn't a fluke of one lucky or unlucky knock. I also ran both sets through eighteen dishwasher cycles over the six weeks, which is roughly three loads a week, to see how the magnet joints and the printed markings held up under real detergent and heat exposure rather than a single wash.

I also tracked something most reviews skip entirely: how each set behaved the first time it got wet and immediately needed to go back to work, which happens constantly on a weeknight when you're measuring flour for one recipe and baking soda for another five minutes later. Spring Chef's magnets held their pull even damp, snapping back together straight out of the sink. BIDFUL's magnets noticeably weakened when wet, and a couple of times the smaller spoons slid apart in the drying rack instead of staying stacked the way they had going in.

Hand holding a stack of Spring Chef magnetic measuring spoons snapped together at the handles

Where Spring Chef Wins

The magnets are the whole point of this product category, and Spring Chef's are just stronger. In my counter-bump test, the Spring Chef spoons stayed locked together every single time, six bumps in a row, three separate days. The BIDFUL set popped apart on the second bump on day one, and again on the fourth bump by day three, which meant the small quarter-teaspoon and eighth-teaspoon spoons ended up loose in the drawer, exactly like the mismatched plastic set I was trying to replace in the first place.

Build quality is the other real gap, and it's the one that shows up over time rather than on day one. Spring Chef's spoons are one-piece stamped stainless steel, so there's no separate cap or seam where the magnet actually sits. Nothing to loosen, nothing to crack, nothing to work its way free after a few dozen trips through the dishwasher. BIDFUL bonds a small magnet disc into a plastic cap fitted onto the end of the handle, and after about three weeks of daily dishwasher cycles I noticed that cap had started to wiggle slightly on two of the five spoons when I pressed on it with a thumbnail. It still functioned, but it's the kind of small failure point that tells you exactly where a company shaved cost to hit a lower price point.

The engraved markings held up better on Spring Chef too, which matters more than people expect until they're squinting at a worn quarter-teaspoon marking while trying to dose baking soda for a recipe that will absolutely taste like metal if you overshoot it. Spring Chef's numbers are laser-etched deep enough that six weeks and eighteen dishwasher cycles haven't touched them. BIDFUL's are shallow stamped, and I could already see the beginning of fading on the tablespoon and teaspoon, the two sizes I reach for the most in an average week of cooking and baking.

Spring Chef also includes a sixth spoon size, a half-tablespoon, plus a storage ring that doubles as a hanging loop if you'd rather hook the whole set on a cabinet knob than lay it flat in a drawer. Neither sounds like much on paper, but the half-tablespoon has genuinely saved me from eyeballing measurements more than once, and the hanging ring means the set now lives on a small hook by my spice cabinet instead of sliding around a drawer every time it opens.

Bar chart comparing magnet hold strength between Spring Chef and BIDFUL measuring spoons

The Small Details That Add Up

Beyond the headline magnet test, it's the small daily friction points that ended up mattering most over six weeks. Spring Chef's spoons sit flush when stacked, so the whole set forms one clean bar with no wobble, which means it hangs level on a magnetic strip instead of tilting to one side. BIDFUL's stack has a slight lean because the plastic magnet caps add a hair of extra thickness at the handle end, and after a few weeks that lean got more noticeable, especially once the caps started to loosen.

Rust resistance was another quiet difference. Both sets claim to be dishwasher safe, and neither has actually rusted at the six-week mark, but I did notice the very beginning of a dull spot forming near the BIDFUL magnet cap seam, right where water can sit against the plastic-to-metal joint. Spring Chef's one-piece construction has no seam for water to pool in, so it still looks and feels brand new after eighteen dishwasher cycles. It's a small thing today, but it's exactly the kind of small thing that becomes a bigger problem a year from now.

Spring Chef magnetic measuring spoons hanging from a magnetic strip mounted inside a spice cabinet

Where BIDFUL Wins

I want to be fair here, because BIDFUL isn't a scam product, it's just a budget version of the same idea aimed at a different buyer. At current pricing it runs a couple dollars cheaper than Spring Chef, and if you're outfitting a first apartment, furnishing a rental kitchen, or building a whole registry of small tools at once, those few dollars per item add up fast across a long move-in list. If all you need is something better than loose plastic spoons rattling around a junk drawer, BIDFUL still clears that bar without question.

The spoons also feel similar to Spring Chef's at first use, before the wear sets in. The shape, the weight in the hand, and the overall stainless finish all read as comparable when you first open the package, which is exactly why it's an easy set to recommend to someone who just wants an upgrade from mismatched plastic and doesn't plan on running the spoons through six weeks of daily testing the way I did.

If you're gentle with your kitchen tools, wash by hand instead of the dishwasher, and don't need the spoons to survive years of near-daily cooking and baking, the corners BIDFUL cut may never actually show up in your kitchen. For someone who bakes twice a year and cooks mostly simple meals, the gap between these two sets may genuinely never matter.

Once you've felt both sets side by side over real weeks of cooking, you can tell exactly where the money went and where it didn't.

Who Should Buy Which

If you bake regularly, cook most nights, or run your measuring spoons through the dishwasher weekly the way I do, buy Spring Chef. The stronger magnets and one-piece construction mean the set still works exactly like new after weeks of real use, the markings stay legible, and the lifetime replacement guarantee backs all of it up if something ever does go wrong. It's the set I've reached for every single time over the last six weeks, and it's the one currently hanging by my spice cabinet.

If you're stocking a kitchen on a tight budget, furnishing a space you won't be in long term, or just need spoons for occasional measuring rather than daily cooking, BIDFUL will get the job done for less money. Just go in with realistic expectations. Expect the magnets to soften and the engraving to fade sooner than Spring Chef's, and expect to replace the set sooner rather than later if you cook and bake as often as I do.

Price per use is worth thinking about too. Spring Chef costs a couple dollars more up front, but if it lasts multiple years the way the one-piece stainless construction suggests it will, that difference works out to pennies per month. BIDFUL's lower price only stays a genuine bargain if the set holds up as long as it needs to, and after six weeks of the magnet cap already loosening, I wouldn't bet on it lasting years of regular cooking without a replacement.

Ready to stop digging through the drawer for a matching spoon?

Spring Chef's magnetic set was the one still holding strong after six weeks in my kitchen. See today's price on Amazon.

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Want the set that actually stays magnetized after month one?

Spring Chef's spoons held their strength through six weeks of real dishwasher and drawer use in my kitchen. Check today's price on Amazon before you decide.

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