Cooking and heat control
Burner layout, heat range, searing hardware, evenness, zone control, and independent cooking-performance signals.
Category guide
Compare the best gas barbecue grills for heat control, build quality, searing hardware, family capacity, cleanup, support, and real buyer-fit tradeoffs.
Burner layout, heat range, searing hardware, evenness, zone control, and independent cooking-performance signals.
Grates, burners, firebox/body materials, weather and corrosion context, warranty-qualified durability signals, and model-line reputation.
Side burners, sear zones, rotisserie hardware, smart probes, accessory systems, folding shelves, and other useful cooking modes.
Ignition, grease management, assembly and maintenance support, storage footprint, mobility, and cleaning access.
How well the grill fits its intended buyer segment without relying on live marketplace prices.
Official manuals, warranty terms, support documentation, parts/service context, and clarity of exact model identity.
Aggregate owner themes from retailer, manufacturer, dealer, community, and support sources, weighted by channel diversity and corroboration.
Compare the best gas barbecue grills for searing, zone cooking, family capacity, premium features, compact patios, cleanup, and long-term ownership tradeoffs.
Broil King Regal S 590 PRO IR is the feature-dense challenger, giving enthusiasts five main burners, infrared side searing, rear rotisserie hardware, and Broil King’s burner system with a lower source-confidence ceiling.
Monument Mesa 415BZ is the strongest value-large pick, pairing four main burners, a Broil Zone, side burner, clear-view lid, and large total cooking area with warranty caveats buyers should understand.
Napoleon Prestige 500 RSIB is a premium feature pick for grillers who want infrared side searing, rear-burner rotisserie capability, stainless build context, and a larger cooking platform than simpler carts.
Napoleon Rogue 525 is a larger mainstream Napoleon alternative with four burners, a 525-square-inch main grate, folding shelves, Wave grids, and warranty context for families comparing beyond Weber.
Weber Genesis E-325 is the best all-around upgrade here: a serious three-burner cart with a Sear Zone, broad cooking surface, accessory expansion, and enough independent support to make it the safest recommendation for most full-size grill buyers.
Weber Genesis E-335 is the Genesis upgrade for cooks who will use a side burner, combining the searing and accessory strengths of the Genesis line with more complete outdoor meal-prep flexibility.
Weber Genesis EX-325W Smart Gas Grill is the connected pick for cooks who want app-assisted temperature tracking and a probe-ready Genesis platform without moving to a larger side-burner or rotisserie setup.
Weber Spirit E-210 is the compact cart pick for small patios, beginners, couples, and smaller households that still want Weber’s full-height cart format and simple Spirit-series maintenance.
Weber Spirit E-310 is the clean mainstream default for buyers who want three-burner control, Weber support, simple grease handling, and a patio-friendly footprint without paying for premium extras they may not use.
Weber Spirit EP-425 is the family-focused Spirit pick, adding four burners, searing hardware, a digital temperature display, and accessory compatibility for cooks who need more flexibility than a smaller three-burner cart.