The Frigidaire Gallery EFIC255 is the budget route to nugget ice — it makes chewable Sonic-style pellets at a fraction of the GE Opal's price, with a high 44 lbs/day output. But reviewers are candid about the trade-offs: it is loud, its pellets are harder than the Opal's, and it carries a low 3.1-star Amazon average with real durability complaints. It is for buyers who want nugget ice cheaply and will accept the reliability and noise risks.

Full review
Real-World Performance
The EFIC255's appeal is nugget ice at a budget-nugget price. The Ice Maker Hub reports it provides restaurant-quality, chewable nugget ice within 15 minutes, producing 44 lbs per day — a higher daily output than the premium GE Profile Opal. For a buyer who specifically wants the soft, chewable Sonic-style ice but balks at the Opal's $450-600 price, the EFIC255 is the obvious alternative.
The ice quality, however, is a step below the Opal. Reviewers note the pellets are harder than the Opal's softer nuggets — closer to a firm pellet than the porous, flavor-absorbing nugget the Opal produces. Reviewed's taste tests did confirm the end product tastes very clean and neutral, a sign of good filtration, so the ice is at least clean-tasting even if its texture is firmer than the category leader's.
Noise and Reliability Concerns
This is where the EFIC255 earns its lower ranking. Reviewed describes the machine as noticeably loud with irregular growling sounds rather than constant operation — a stark contrast to the whisper-quiet GE Opal. In a kitchen or entertaining space, that intermittent growl is genuinely intrusive.
Durability is the bigger issue. The EFIC255 carries a low 3.1-star Amazon average, with reviewers split between loving the chewable ice and reporting units that broke after a few months. Reviewed notes mixed reliability, with some units breaking down and third-party manufacturing possibly contributing to quality-control issues. These are serious caveats on a $300-plus appliance and the main reason it ranks below the more reliable picks here despite making desirable nugget ice.
Features and Design
The EFIC255 includes an auto self-cleaning cycle, which is a genuine convenience nugget makers benefit from given their complexity. It is reasonably compact for a nugget machine, with a 3 lb bin, and comes in several colors including navy and stainless looks.
What it lacks is the smart layer. Reviewed notes it has no app connectivity and no interior lighting — both features the GE Opal offers. So while it matches the Opal on ice format and beats it on raw output, it is a more basic, manual appliance. For buyers who do not care about scheduling ice from a phone, that is an acceptable omission; for those who want a modern smart maker, it is a clear gap.
Where It Falls Short
The EFIC255's weaknesses are significant enough to warrant honesty: it is loud, its 3.1-star Amazon rating reflects real owner dissatisfaction, and durability complaints — including units failing within months — are common. The nuggets, while chewable, are harder than the Opal's. These are not minor quibbles; they are the reasons it sits at the bottom of this ranking despite making a desirable ice type.
It is included because it fills a real niche — nugget ice for buyers who cannot or will not pay GE Opal money — but buyers should go in clear-eyed. The risk-reward is genuinely different from the other picks: you save substantially versus the Opal, but accept more noise and a real chance of reliability problems.
How It Compares to Alternatives
The EFIC255's only direct competitor is the GE Profile Opal 2.0, and the comparison is lopsided on everything but price and output. The Opal is quieter, more reliable, smarter, and makes softer nuggets; the EFIC255 is cheaper and makes more ice per day. If your budget can stretch to the Opal, it is the better machine by a wide margin.
Against the bullet makers (Frigidaire EFIC189, Magic Chef MCIM22SV) and the clear-cube Frigidaire EFIC452-SS, the EFIC255 makes a different and more sought-after ice type, but those alternatives are generally more reliable for the money. The EFIC255 is specifically the budget-nugget compromise pick.
Who It's Best For
The EFIC255 is for the budget-minded nugget-ice fan who wants chewable pellets and high daily output and is willing to tolerate more noise and a real durability risk to avoid the GE Opal's premium price. If reliability and quiet operation matter, save up for the Opal; if you just want lots of ice cheaply and do not need nuggets, a bullet maker is the safer, cheaper choice.
Strengths
- +Makes chewable Sonic-style nugget ice for far less than the GE Opal
- +High 44 lbs/day output with restaurant-style nuggets in ~15 minutes
- +Clean, neutral-tasting ice from good filtration
- +Compact for a nugget maker, with a 3 lb bin
- +Auto self-cleaning cycle
Watch-outs
- −Loud, with irregular growling operation noise
- −Low 3.1-star Amazon average and notable durability complaints
- −Nuggets are harder than the GE Opal's softer pellets
- −No app connectivity or interior lighting
How it compares
The budget nugget-ice maker, offering the same chewable format as the premium GE Profile Opal 2.0 but with harder pellets, more noise, and weaker reliability. Its higher daily output beats the Opal on volume, but it lacks the Opal's quiet operation and smart features. It makes a different ice type from the bullet Frigidaire EFIC189 and Magic Chef MCIM22SV and the clear-cube Frigidaire EFIC452-SS.
Who this is for
At a glance: Budget-minded nugget-ice fans who want chewable pellets and high output and will accept more noise and durability risk to avoid the GE Opal's price.
Why you’d buy the Frigidaire Gallery EFIC255 Nugget
- Makes chewable Sonic-style nugget ice for far less than the GE Opal.
- High 44 lbs/day output with restaurant-style nuggets in ~15 minutes.
- Clean, neutral-tasting ice from good filtration.
Why you’d skip it
- Loud, with irregular growling operation noise.
- Low 3.1-star Amazon average and notable durability complaints.
- Nuggets are harder than the GE Opal's softer pellets.
Rating sources
“Our taste tests confirmed that the end product tastes very clean and neutral, which is a sign of good filtration, but the machine is noticeably loud with irregular growling sounds.”
“The machine provides restaurant-quality, chewable nugget ice within 15 minutes, producing 44 lbs of ice per day.”
“It makes chewable ice within about 15 minutes, but owners are split — some love the chewable nuggets while others report units that broke after a few months.”
Our 3.8 score is the average of these published ratings. Ratings marked * were derived from the reviewer’s written analysis or video transcript — the publisher didn’t print an explicit numeric score, so we inferred one from their own words. Click through to verify. More about methodology.



