The PE900 is best understood as a PE800 with two upgrades bolted on: wireless design transfer (via Brother's Artspira app, no USB stick shuffle) and a larger built-in design library — 193 versus 138. Everything that made the PE800 the default 5×7 machine is intact: the same field, the same colour touchscreen editing, the same reliable tension. It is, deliberately, an evolution rather than a reinvention.

How it compares


MachineFieldBuilt-insPrice (axis $300–1,300)Score
Brother PE900 our pick · new 5×7
5×7 in 193 $899–1,000 8.4/10
Brother PE800 better value used
5×7 in 138 $700–780 8.6/10
Brother SE2000 combo alternative
5×7 in 193 $1,099–1,299 8.0/10
Brother PE535 budget 4×4
4×4 in 80 $299–399 7.4/10

Verified street/used pricing, 3 Jul 2026.

Where it wins, where it loses


Wins
+ Current production — factory support, warranty, in-stock hoops
+ Wireless transfer removes the USB-stick step from every design
+ 193 built-in designs and 5×7 field in one tidy machine
+ Same proven stitch quality and reliability as the PE800
Loses
A meaningful premium over a used PE800 for modest gains
Still single-needle — manual thread changes on multi-colour work
Embroidery only; no sewing
App-based workflow is a small learning curve for USB diehards

What owners report


We read the threads so you don't have to. Each card summarises what owners in that community actually say — follow the link to read the discussion yourself.

r/Machine_Embroidery · "PE800 vs PE900"

Owners agree the PE900’s meaningful additions over the discontinued PE800 are wireless design transfer and more built-in designs — the stitch quality and 5×7 field are unchanged.

Read the thread →
r/Machine_Embroidery · beginner machine picks

For a new buyer who wants a current-production 5×7 machine with support and wireless, the PE900 is the community’s default recommendation over hunting for used stock.

Read the thread →

Common questions


Is the Brother PE900 worth it over a used PE800?

If you want current production, warranty and wireless design transfer — yes. If you’re comfortable buying used and don’t mind a USB stick, a clean PE800 near $700 gets you identical stitch quality for $200–$300 less. That’s the whole decision.

Does the Brother PE900 need Wi-Fi to work?

No. Wireless transfer via the Artspira app is a convenience, not a requirement — the PE900 accepts designs by USB stick exactly like the PE800 did.

What hoop sizes does the PE900 support?

Up to 5×7 inches (one 5×7 hoop included). Smaller hoops are available separately for small jobs. It cannot stitch fields larger than 5×7 — for that you’re into the Janome 500E class ($1,800+).

Can the PE900 embroider caps?

No — like all flat-bed single-needle home machines, it can’t hoop a structured cap. Caps need a multi-needle machine with a cap driver, like the Brother PR680W or a Ricoma.

How this verdict was made

Full method →
01 · Specs collected
Manufacturer sheets, manuals, dealer listings.
02 · Owners mined
Reddit, forums, groups — cited, never invented.
03 · Prices tracked
Major retailers, checked monthly.
04 · Verdict scored
Four sub-scores, one stamp. No sponsors.