Weber Current ranking
Outdoor & Garden / Gas Barbecue Grills
Best Gas Barbecue Grills for May 2026
RankReason compares freestanding gas barbecue grills by heat control, build quality, feature usefulness, cleaning, warranty support, owner sentiment, and real buyer fit.
How We Chose the Best Gas Barbecue Grills
RankReason scored each researched freestanding gas grill against weighted criteria for cooking performance and heat control, build quality, useful features, ease of ownership, segment fit, warranty support, and non-marketplace owner sentiment. Manufacturer documentation and independent hands-on or editorial reviews carried the most weight; thin owner detail lowered confidence instead of becoming a claim.
Ranking information Methodology and scoring criteria
Why this ranking exists
RankReason scored each researched freestanding gas grill against weighted criteria for cooking performance and heat control, build quality, useful features, ease of ownership, segment fit, warranty support, and non-marketplace owner sentiment. Manufacturer documentation and independent hands-on or editorial reviews carried the most weight; thin owner detail lowered confidence instead of becoming a claim.
How we ranked them
- Cooking and heat control Burner layout, heat range, searing capability, evenness/zone control, independent cooking-performance signals, and exact-model confidence.
- Build and durability Grates, burners, firebox/body materials, weather and corrosion context, warranty-qualified durability signals, and model-line reputation.
- Features and versatility Useful shopper-facing features such as sear zones, side burners, rotisserie hardware, smart probes, accessory systems, griddle modes, folding shelves, and real use-case breadth.
- Ease of ownership Ignition, grease management, assembly/maintenance support, storage footprint, mobility, cleaning access, and complexity penalties.
- Value and segment fit How well the grill fits its intended buyer segment without relying on live marketplace price: mainstream default, family, premium, compact, value, or splurge.
- Warranty and support Official manuals, warranty terms, support documentation, parts/service context, and clarity of exact model identity.
- Owner sentiment Aggregate non-marketplace owner themes from manufacturer, retailer, dealer, community, and support channels, weighted by channel diversity and agreement. Thin single-channel sentiment lowers confidence.
- Cooking and heat control24%
- Build and durability18%
- Features and versatility16%
- Ease of ownership12%
- Value and segment fit13%
- Warranty and support9%
- Owner sentiment8%
Ranked product lineup
Weber
Weber Spirit E-310 Gas Grill
Weber Spirit EP-425 Gas Grill
Weber Genesis E-335 Gas Grill
Weber Genesis EX-325W Smart Gas Grill
Napoleon Prestige 500 RSIB
Monument Grills Monument Mesa 415BZ Stainless Propane Gas Grill
Napoleon Rogue 525 Gas Grill
Weber Spirit E-210 Gas Grill
Broil King Regal S 590 PRO IR
Decision table Best-fit and skip-if notes
Most buyers upgrading to a serious full-size gas grill
Small patios
90/100
Most mainstream propane patio buyers
Large entertaining
88/100
Families and frequent entertainers
Tiny patios
87/100
Premium Weber buyers who want a side burner
Smart-monitoring-first buyers
86/100
Smart-grill buyers
Buyers who dislike app features
85/100
Napoleon
Napoleon Prestige 500 RSIB
Premium Napoleon buyers
Simple lower-cost large-grill shoppers
83/100
Monument Grills
Monument Mesa 415BZ Stainless Propane Gas Grill
Value shoppers wanting a larger four-burner grill
Premium dealer-network shoppers
82/100
Napoleon
Napoleon Rogue 525 Gas Grill
Families wanting a larger Napoleon Rogue cart
Small patios
80/100
Small patios
Large parties
79/100
Broil King
Broil King Regal S 590 PRO IR
Feature-density shoppers
Buyers requiring strong primary product-page coverage
78/100

Ranked first because it has the most complete all-around case: strong independent testing, a versatile three-burner Genesis platform, Sear Zone, accessory expansion, broad cooking surface, easier grease management, and broader support than higher-complexity premium grills.
- Strong independent review support
- Sear Zone and accessory-ready platform
- Capacity varies by LP/NG configuration
- No side burner on this exact platform
Verdict: Choose it if you want one full-size grill to handle weeknight food, seared steaks, and family gatherings without needing a side burner. Skip it if your patio is tight or you would rather pay only for a basic three-burner setup.

Ranked second as the cleanest mainstream default. It gives most households three-burner control, a compact-enough cart, Weber support/warranty context, simple grease handling, and a major independent testing win without the cost and complexity of bigger premium carts.
- Balanced size and three-burner control
- Strong Serious Eats support
- Less total cooking area than larger carts
- Owner-feedback detail is limited
Verdict: Choose it if you want a straightforward Weber that does the fundamentals well. Skip it if you regularly host large groups or need side-burner cooking.

Ranked third for families that need more burners and searing flexibility than the Spirit E-310. The EP-425 brings four-burner zone cooking, Boost Burner/Sear Zone hardware, digital temperature display, and accessory expansion, though owner-sentiment depth is weaker than its performance case.
- Four-burner family flexibility
- Sear Zone and Boost Burner setup
- Side-table size and thermometer precision are tradeoffs
- Owner-feedback detail is thinner than for the top picks
Verdict: Choose it for family zone cooking and higher-heat searing in the Spirit line. Skip it if a compact three-burner grill already fits your cooking pattern.

Ranked fourth as the premium Weber splurge for cooks who will actually use a side burner. It keeps the Genesis searing/accessory strengths while adding side cooking, but less detailed owner feedback and overlap with the simpler E-325 keep it below the top three.
- Side burner plus Sear Zone
- Strong splurge-pick editorial support
- Owner-feedback detail is thinner than for the top picks
- More grill than many everyday patios need
Verdict: Choose it if a side burner is a real workflow upgrade. Skip it if you mostly grill mains and would rather keep the platform simpler.

Ranked fifth as the best researched smart-grill choice. Remote probe monitoring and app support solve a real problem for temperature-tracking cooks, and the sear-zone Genesis base is strong; the rank is capped because exact-model owner feedback and smart-feature reliability signals are thin.
- Useful remote probe monitoring
- Strong smart-grill editorial support
- Exact-model owner feedback is thin
- No side burner or rotisserie package
Verdict: Choose it for app-connected probe monitoring on a capable Genesis cart. Skip it if you prefer analog controls or want side-burner or rotisserie hardware.

Ranked sixth for premium cooks who want both infrared side searing and rear rotisserie capability. Its feature set is stronger than simpler carts, but thinner owner detail and variant ambiguity keep it behind the better-supported Weber leaders.
- Infrared side burner
- Rear rotisserie capability
- Owner-feedback detail is thinner than for the top picks
- Variant naming deserves a careful pre-purchase check
Verdict: Choose it for premium Napoleon versatility and multiple cooking modes. Skip it if you want the simplest ownership story or strongest owner-feedback trail.

Ranked seventh as the strongest researched value-large grill. Broil Zone searing, a side burner, four main burners, a 630-square-inch total layout, hands-on review support, and useful owner praise make it more compelling than basic budget carts, while warranty and rust terms limit the durability score.
- Broil Zone and side burner
- Strong value/capacity mix
- Warranty and rust terms require careful reading
- Variant naming should be handled carefully
Verdict: Choose it when capacity and searing hardware matter more than premium dealer-network polish. Skip it if you expect cosmetic wear coverage to be broad.

Ranked eighth as the larger mainstream Napoleon alternative. It has a 525 sq. in. main grate, four burners, folding shelves, Wave grids, and a 15-year warranty context, but Weber’s top Spirit and Genesis picks have stronger independent testing support.
- Large four-burner Rogue format
- Folding side shelves
- Brand-page detail is thinner than Weber finalists
- Independent hands-on coverage is thinner than Weber finalists
Verdict: Choose it if you want a roomier Rogue with useful patio management. Skip it if independent lab-style testing is your top decision factor.

Ranked ninth because it is the best compact cart in the researched set. The two-burner format and simple Spirit maintenance package are ideal for small patios and beginners, but it cannot match larger grills for indirect-cooking flexibility, searing hardware, or entertaining capacity.
- Compact full-height cart
- Strong small-space editorial support
- Only two burners
- No side burner or sear zone
Verdict: Choose it for simple two-burner Weber grilling in limited space. Skip it if you need strong indirect zones, sear-zone hardware, or large-party capacity.

Ranked tenth as a feature-dense Weber/Napoleon alternative. Five main burners, infrared side searing, rear rotisserie hardware, and specialist value-guide support are compelling, but thinner owner feedback and less direct brand documentation make it a lower-confidence recommendation.
- Five-burner platform
- Infrared side burner and rear rotisserie
- Brand-page detail is thinner than the leaders
- Owner sentiment is thin
Verdict: Choose it if you want maximum freestanding-cart features outside Weber/Napoleon. Skip it if you want stronger current brand-page and owner-detail support.