A hugely flexible French Door fridge freezer
A masterclass in flexibility, the Bosch KFF96PIEP is a French Door fridge freezer with a hugely customisable interior. Its split shelves, FlexBar accessory holder, and dual VitaFresh Pro drawers make it easy to store and maintain food in the way that you want. It’s a little bulky, with the handles protruding into the room, but if you’ve got the space and want the best organisation, mixed with excellent temperature control, then this is an exceptional fridge freezer.
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Hugely flexible fridge space -
Brilliant temperature control -
Neat integrated water dispenser
Key Features
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Review Price: £2999 -
French door design
Entire top of the unit is a full-width fridge. -
Integrated water dispenser
Water is dispensed from inside the fridge, and ice cubes created automatically. -
Smart app
Remote control and monitor the fridge freezer from anywhere.
Introduction
If you look at the core specs of any fridge freezer, you get a sense of how big it is and how much food you can store inside, but making a choice is about more than this.
A quality fridge freezer doesn’t just provide cooling space; it also provides flexible storage that keeps your food in the best condition, making it easy to store and find what you’re looking for. In that regard, the Bosch KFF96PIEP is hands-down the most flexible fridge freezer that I’ve tested.
Beautifully designed, this French Door model features a brilliant interior, complete with adjustable shelves, clever drawers, and the innovative FlexBar. And, it’s a smart model, too.
Design and features
- Highly flexible fridge space
- Cleverly-designed freezer
- Water dispenser
A bold and serious-looking fridge freezer, the Bosch KFF96PIEP has a stainless steel exterior with chunky handles that stick out. That does mean that this model is better suited to larger kitchens where there’s room for its full depth. If that sounds like your home, then you won’t be disappointed with this model.


It’s a French Door fridge freezer, which means that the entire top of the unit is fridge, running from edge to edge. I love this kind of design, as the full-width cavity provides plenty of room to fit in wider items, and you don’t have to bend down to get to everyday items.


Here, there’s 402 litres of space to play with, which is simply huge. No matter how much fresh food you’ve got, the Bosch KFF96PIEP has the space to store it.
Organisation is brilliant. Most fridge freezers have full-width shelves, but Bosch has one fixed shelf and then four half-width shelves that can go in multiple positions. That gives a huge amount of flexibility in how you position the shelves and store your items, whether you want lots of jars or want to make space for taller items, such as bottles.
There’s also the FlexBar, a hanging rail for three bundled accessories: a box, ideal for treats; a small floating shelf; and a bottle rack. These items can be removed or slid around to suit where you want them, and are unique to Bosch.


There are three drawers. A single full-width one provides easy storage space for items you want to grab quickly, but below are the VitaFresh Pro drawers.


Each one has separate temperature and humidity controls for different types of items: -2°C for meat/fish, 0°C for fruit, 0°C for vegetables, 1°C for beverages and 4°C for snacks. There’s also a custom setting via the HomeConnect app.


Again, this is a level of flexibility that other fridge freezers don’t offer, and I’ve not seen the same kind of flexibility anywhere else.


Both doors have three large door pockets, with the middle pocket able to go in one of two positions. Each pocket is large enough to hold big items, such as four-pint milk containers.
There’s one special pocket that has a flip-up cover. The level of flexibility is incredible, and the Bosch KFF96PIEP is, by far, the most versatile fridge freezer that I’ve reviewed.


As a plumbed-in device, the Bosch KFF96PIEP has a water dispenser, which is hidden on the inside wall of the fridge. That does mean that using it requires opening the left-hand door, but the advantage is that the exterior isn’t compromised by a water dispenser.


Underneath is the freezer section. Most French Door models have two compartments, but the Bosch KFF96PIEP has a large pull-out drawer that runs side to side. This makes it more akin to a chest freezer, and the wide drawer can hold very large items.


Space is very flexible. The main drawer has a sliding divider, so you can choose how to split up the space.


Above this is a smaller drawer, which has more space in it, and a tub that holds ice cubes, created automatically when the fridge freezer is plumbed in. Bosch even provides an ice scoop.


Then, at the top is another slide-out drawer. The freezer section is comprised of brilliantly divided space, and I think I prefer this to standard freezer drawers.


Temperature control is via the control panel at the top, with separate controls for the fridge and freezer. They’re easy to use, but it might be quicker to set up the smart app.


With Wi-Fi built in, the Bosch KFF96PIEP works with the HomeConnect app, which is compatible with devices across the company’s range of products, including Neff and Siemens.


From the app, I could remotely set the temperature of all compartments, and I also received warnings for problems, such as when a door had been left open.
Peformance
- Excellent temperature control
- Good running costs for the size
To test how well the Bosch KFF96PIEP can keep food, I loaded it up with ice blocks to replicate real food and used temperature sensors to log temperatures every 15 minutes over a period of a few weeks.
Overall, the fridge section had an average temperature of 3.14°C, which is 0.86°C colder than the target temperature of 4°C. Impressively, the maximum temperature that I recorded was 4.9°C, showing that temperatures don’t spike too high.
Standard deviation shows that most temperatures fluctuated by +/-0.43°C from the average. Anything under 1°C in this test is good, and the lower the better, as it shows that temperatures remain stable.
Some fridge freezers can have big differences across the cavity, but the Bosch KFF96PIEP did very well: 3.21°C average on the top shelf, 2.53°C on the middle shelf and 3.68°C on the bottom shelf.
I also wanted to see how well the VitaFresh Pro drawers did, so I set one to -2°C. I found that this averaged -1.45°C with barely any temperature fluctuation (+/-0.25°C).


I set the other drawer to 0°C, and found that this averaged just above that at a chilly 1.4°C. Again temperatures were very stable, mostly fluctuating by +/-0.2°C.
Moving to the freezer section, I added temperature sensors to the top, middle and bottom parts of the drawer. Readings were very similar across the range, and the average temperature was -19°C, which is 1°C colder than the target of -18°C.
Standard deviation shows that temperatures mostly fluctuated by +/-0.79°C; again, that’s a great result as it’s below 1°C.
Like most large fridge freezers, bar the Samsung RM70F67RDR, the Bosch KFF96PIEP has an E energy rating. Using a power meter, I estimated that this fridge freezer would cost around £66.56 a year to run (assuming a unit cost of 24.5p per kWh). That works out to a reasonable 12p per litre of space.
Should you buy it?
Buy if you want brilliantly flexibly storage space
Exceptionally well designed, this French Door fridge freezer offers internal flexibility like no other product that I’ve reviewed.
Don’t buy if you want something smaller or cheaper
This is an expensive fridge freezer, and its chunky handles protrude, which may make a slimmer, cheaper model better for some.
Final Thoughts
If flexibility is very important to you, there’s nothing quite as good as the Bosch KFF96PIEP. It’s brilliantly organised fridge space, customisable drawers and split shelves mean that the internal space can be reorganised to suit whatever you want to store.
I love the pull-out freezer storage, too, although other French Door models offer even more flexibility with two freezer compartments, one of which can often be converted into extra fridge space.
Overall, for the flexibility, brilliant design, excellent temperature control and decent running costs, this is a top premium fridge freezer.
If you want something smaller or cheaper, check out my guide to the best fridge freezers.
How we test
We test every fridge freezer we review thoroughly over an extended period of time. We use industry standard tests to compare features properly. We’ll always tell you what we find. We never, ever, accept money to review a product.
Find out more about how we test in our ethics policy.
- We test for at least two weeks.
- We use temperature sensors to monitor the internal temperature to help us accurately compare models from different manufacturers.
FAQs
These are two individually temperature-controlled drawers at the bottom of the fridge section.
You can control the fridge freezer remotely and also get warnings, such as when a door has been left open.
Test Data
Bosch KFF96PIEP | |
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Average temperature (fridge) | 3.14 °C |
Cost per litre of space | £0.12 |
Average temperature (freezer) | -19.01 °C |
Full Specs
Bosch KFF96PIEP Review | |
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Manufacturer | Bosch |
Size (Dimensions) | 905 x 706 x 1830 MM |
Weight | 153.8 KG |
Release Date | 2025 |
First Reviewed Date | 25/08/2025 |
Model Number | Bosch KFF96PIEP |
Number of doors | 3 |
Freezer capacity | 171 litres |
Door shelves | 6 |
Drawers | 3 |
Frost free | Yes |
Accessories | Water dispenser, ice cube dispenser |
Water dispenser | Yes |
Ice options | Cubed |
Water filter | Yes |
Fridge capacity | 402 litres |
Internal shelves | 7 |
Salad drawers | 3 |