The 6 best pellet grills of 2025, tested and reviewed

The best pellet grills make it easy to achieve wood-fired flavor and control cooking temperatures. Here are our top pellet smokers for every budget.

The wide world of barbecue is equal parts delicious and daunting. Many of us home grillers want wood-fired flavor but don't have the time to tend live fires. Enter pellet grills. The best pellet grills are dynamic and offer various forms of direct and indirect heat. All that, plus smoky flavor, without the fuss of charcoal? Sign us up.

From basic designs that work in mild climates to full cooking stations with side burners and gaskets to seal in smoke, we found the best pellet grills for every budget and demand. After extensive testing, our top pick is the Traeger Ironwood XL. It has double-layer walls, a Super Smoke setting, and WiFi connectivity to give you better heat retention and temperature control. If you're on a tighter budget, the Z Grills Pioneer 450Bdoesn't have smart connectivity, but it regulates temperature well and has a smoke setting that we love for slow cooking.

Our top picks for the best pellet smokers

Best overall: Traeger Ironwood XL — See at Amazon

Best compact: Traeger Pro 575 — See at Amazon

Best budget: Z Grills Pioneer 450B — See at The Home Depot

Best splurge: Traeger Timberline Pellet Grill — See at Traeger

Best outdoor kitchen: Camp Chef Woodwind 24 — See at Dick's Sporting Goods

Best charcoal: Masterbuilt Gravity Series 1050 — See at Amazon


Best overall

Our previous top pick was the Traeger Pro 575, which we still recommend if you're looking for a pellet smoker that is compact and under $1000. The Ironwood XL just offers additional features and a larger cooking area (even the smaller model), which makes it a more versatile grill.

It's not as tricked out as the Timberline or Woodridge Elite, but the Traeger Ironwood XL has everything you need to smoke and grill like a pro. The smoker's body has double-layer insulation, which protects your food from temperature fluctuations. Plus, the Ironwood features Super Smoke: during a cook, you can trigger an extra strong push of smoke to increase the barbecue flavor.

Another thing we love about the Ironwood is the EZ-Clean Grease and Ash Keg system. It slots in underneath the grill grates and, with the help of a drip tray, catches all the pellet grill debris. This isn't the most exciting Traeger innovation, but it makes one of the worst parts of grilling tolerable.

Traeger continues to improve their mobile app and WiFi connectivity. It has become a seamless part of the cooking experience — we've tried out recipes from the Traeger library and monitored our cooks during rainy days from the comfort of our living rooms.

Check out our guide to the best Traeger grills from all line-ups.


Best compact

If you want a hassle-free grill that can dazzle guests as much as yourself, the Traeger Pro 575 pellet grill is an appliance made for the ages. It's the heaviest-duty pellet grill we've found that could be called compact and costs under a thousand dollars. (Find our favorite fuel in our best smoker pellets guide, with Traeger landing another top spot.)

Heat retention and moderation are the most important things when it comes to how the best pellet smokers function. While the Traeger doesn't have the quarter-inch steel we like to see on a grill, it's far thicker and seals much better than anything else we've tried in this price range. We've kept temperatures steady within five degrees of our target temps in all kinds of weather, something even an experienced griller would have a devil of a time doing with charcoal or wood.

The Pro's temps range from 180 degrees Fahrenheit, which is just right for low-and-slow cooking, up to 500, which won't get a sear but will effectively braise. This is where the Traeger Pro series might fall short against more modular grills, but it still more than earned a spot in this guide.

The Traeger Pro Series grills hold heat well and are built for the long haul, so if you're working with a moderate budget and don't want to take up your whole backyard, you needn't look further.

Read our full Traeger 575 Pro pellet grill review here.


Best budget

We've been testing the best pellet grills for years, and while the shortcomings of budget options were quick to show, the Z Grill 450B didn't have the same trouble regulating temperature that we found elsewhere. This grill was also easier to assemble than other options within this price range and beyond. Temperatures range from 180 to 450 degrees Fahrenheit, but the "smoke" setting lets you cheat temperatures down to 170, which we love for extra low-and-slow cooking.

Some people might wish for the WiFi in Traeger and Camp Chef grills, but if you're keeping with a budget, you don't need the extra electronics on your pellet smoker. Careful positioning of the grill near enough to read an LCD screen or run a Bluetooth- or WiFi-enabled temperature probe can stand in for built-in electronics.

Z Grills Pioneer Pellet Smoker cooking a brisket outside.

Z Grills' line of pellet smokers doesn't use the thickest steel, but it is comparable to the steel found in grills twice their price or more.

The real downside of this grill is that it's not very well sealed, so smoke seeps out. The quick fix for that is to add your own gaskets (a good solution for most grills, frankly), and Lavalock is a great option. We checked with grilling experts who said that the smoke leak can happen, but the fire won't burn its way past the auger.

If you're looking to barbecue for a small group and don't want to spend too much or fuss with gadgetry or accessories, the Z Grills 450B is a great, simple, and affordable solution.


Best splurge

If you want the most flawless barbecue with the least amount of effort, the Traeger Timberline series (go for the XL if you need the best pellet grill for large groups) is as good as it gets. It goes without saying that you'll pay dearly for it, but purchasing a cover and taking cursory care will keep this grill going for many years to come.

However, be forewarned that the Timberline is exceptionally heavy at over 250 pounds. This is a true outdoor cooking station, minus a sink — it's not something you'll want to cart around your backyard, but rather leave in place on a solid surface. Where a heavy-duty offset smoker with wagon wheels is your rough-and-ready all-terrain utility Jeep, the Timberline is more like a Cadillac.

Veteran grillers will find it hard to justify spending more than $3000 on a pellet grill, especially one with relatively thin metal. This grill isn't for them, but for anyone who wants as hands-off and foolproof an experience as possible.

While the grill does a good job of keeping a steady temperature and cooking evenly, the metal on the firebox is surprisingly thin, especially compared with the quarter-inch-thick stuff you'll find on charcoal or stick-burning pit grills around the same price. Accessorizing, starting with the $200 purchase of a grill cover, is almost prohibitively expensive. Still, this is the best upgrade pellet grill of nearly a dozen that I've tried, and it's built to last better than any other, too.

Read our full review of the Traeger Timberline series here.


Best outdoor kitchen

Camp Chef was one of the first pellet grill brands on the market. While we find other options more suitable for the aspiring griller, the Woodwind series's list of accessories and modularity surpasses any of the other best pellet smokers,

The Woodwind grill operates basically and efficiently, and the interface is easy to navigate and has a strong WiFi connection. It's the accessories, starting with the Blanket and up to the 28,000-btu, cast-aluminum Sidekick side burner, Flat Top, Sear box, and Pizza Oven (available with a single and double burner) that win us over. With this setup, there's little you can't do with this grill in your backyard — all at a reasonable price.

Various meats on the Camp Chef Woodwind Grill with meat thermometer probes sticking into them.

If you're furnishing your patio with grilling equipment on a budget under $10,000, the Camp Chef Woodwind has a tough catalog to beat.

We have found that this grill is hard to keep steady in a stiff breeze or in sub-zero weather, though you'll do just fine in mild weather or a subtropical climate. Even so, theBlanketsolves that impressively well, which is a great alternative to spending hundreds or even thousands more on a grill with thicker steel and a more robust seal.

Based on our testing and research over the past few years, if you want a one-stop grilling station in your backyard that you can customize for all intents and purposes but you don't want to break out thousands of dollars to do it, the best versatile pellet grill is your ticket.

Read our full review of the Camp Chef Woodwind review here.


Best charcoal

Tending a charcoal fire is much easier said than done, and in almost every case of disappointing or failed grilling attempts, it is the cause of the downfall. Masterbuilt's towering Gravity Series is an imposing appliance with a large hopper and feeder that, thanks to WiFi connectivity, works just like a pellet smoker, but for charcoal.

Why go with charcoal over wood pellets? Many cooks argue that charcoal offers more flavor, but it's also a simple fact that charcoal burns much, much hotter than wood pellets. The Gravity Series ranges from about 150 degrees Fahrenheit (a great temperature for low-and-slow smoking) up to about 700 degrees, which is ideal for searing — something even the best pellet grills can't generally do.

Ultimately, it's a grill, griddle, and a (higher-temp) smoker all in one, earning the title of the best charcoal pellet grill. It also has two-sided cast-iron grates, with one thinner side dedicated to smoking and the thicker one for searing.

An open Masterbuilt Gravity Series 1050 charcoal grill filled with hot dogs, hot dog buns, and more.

For those wanting a smokier result than wood pellets produce, this is an easy and affordable way to achieve charcoal flavor and heat.

Monitoring the temperature with WiFi and Bluetooth was easy, and connectivity is about as steady as most grills we've tested — we couldn't go around the corner to the store, but we stayed connected around the house, adjusting temperature and even turning the grill off (though we recommend doing that in person).

The Masterbuilt Gravity Series grill has a few downsides like any other. Firstly, it's made of relatively lightweight metal, which isn't good for heat retention or longevity, and secondly, it took more than two hours to build. Expectedly, temperatures tend to fluctuate more than they do in a wood-pellet smoker, but that's charcoal for you (briquettes will burn more evenly than hardwood lump).


How to choose a pellet grill

Controls: An increasing number of grills offer state-of-the-art WiFi or Bluetooth connectivity that allows you to monitor your brisket anywhere from your deck to miles away. However, some use simpler controls and don't require you to add another application to your phone. Tech gadgetry doesn't always correspond to better performance, so it's about your preference and cooking style.

Accessories: Many of the best pellet smokers we tested don't offer a ton of extras, or the brands require you to purchase them separately. If you are looking for a one-stop outdoor kitchen (minus the sink), be prepared to spend more for a side burner and extra shelves. The Traeger Timberline and the Camp Chef Woodwind series have the most extra features of the grills we tested.

Size: Grills are best measured in cooking surface area, usually in square inches of space. Smaller models in the 450 to 575-square-inch range offer plenty of space for four to six people, and larger ones, above 800 square inches, can cook for roughly a dozen people or more. Look for the best pellet grill brands to show diagrams of their grill layouts, depicting how many pork shoulders, chicken wings, briskets, and/or hamburger patties a grill can hold.


How we test pellet grills

Someone pouring compressed wood pellets into the hopper of a Traeger Timberline XL Grill.

We spent more than two years building and testing pellet grills and smokers, speaking with experts like veteran TV host and author Steven Raichlen, Hey Grill Hey! founder Susie Bulloch, and Chef Shola Olunloyo of Studio Kitchen to find out what makes a good pellet grill and for whom they're made. We evaluated grills by cooking chicken drumsticks and pork shoulders "low and slow" and grilling zucchini at a higher heat.

TestIdeal resultsOur findings
Temperature controlSet target temperature and measure variance5 degrees or less away from target temperatureThe quality of heat retention generally increases with price
SmokingLook for a smoke ring on bigger cuts of meatDeep red rings and a noticeably smoky flavorCharcoal grills or smokers will always produce smokier results

Build quality: We considered the quality of materials as we built each grill, noting when metal was flimsier or more prone to denting. We also left each model out in the elements — some for more than two years on end. None of the grills or the electronics we've tested have failed. Installing quality gaskets on your own is a cheap and easy way to upgrade any grill.

Ease of use: From building and connectivity to operating and cleaning, we looked at the process of owning and maintaining these grills. We considered if it was easy for a beginner to operate the grill, if the controls were intuitive, and if the setup process was unnecessarily difficult.

Value: Many of the grills we tested came with limited accessories, some of them essential. While the budget-friendly pick on our list does come with a cover (that's survived two years outside), every other grill we tested required a cover be purchased separately. Add on shelves, hooks, and/or brackets that really should be included, and it gets expensive quickly. Still, build quality and warranty balanced out these pricier picks.


Pellet grill FAQs

An open Traeger Timberline Grill showing chicken drumsticks and pork being cooked.

Cleaning grills can be a pain, but a great workaround for almost all of them is a disposable aluminum tray, or lining the grill's catch pan with tin foil.

What is the best pellet grill brand?

We hesitate to say one brand completely surpasses the rest, but Traeger grills and smokers routinely make the top of our lists. After testing grills from the Timberline, Ironwood, and Pro lines, we can confidently recommend almost any Traeger model.

What are the negatives of pellet grills?

Do pellet grills, also known as pellet smokers, compare with the best barbecue smokers favored by pitmasters or even the best charcoal grills? We asked Steven Raichlen, one of our favorite grillmasters, and he came back with a resounding "No." However, he did say that pellet smokers are great for the layperson who wants wood-smoke flavor without the associated sweat equity.

Is a charcoal or wood pellet smoker better?

Charcoal gives a stronger flavor, but pellet smokers are far easier to use. It comes down to time and labor investment. Backyard grillers can excel with a pellet grill, while pit masters aren't likely to swap out their charcoal.

If you do buy a pellet smoker, don't expect the same smokiness in your food that you would if you delicately fed furniture-grade, kiln-dried cooking wood to an immaculately glowing bed of coals for 12 hours. That's the kind of art that can only and will only ever be done by hand.

How do pellet grills work?

Pellet grills have a hopper that feeds an auger, which grinds compressed hardwood pellets into smaller chunks that fall into and ignite in a firebox, creating smoke.

Pellet grill and pellet smoker can be used interchangeably. Grills tend to work with direct heat, while smokers often use indirect heat. Modern pellet grills strike a balance between grills and smokers because they range between low-and-slow cooking temperatures (160-225 degrees Fahrenheit or so) and about 500 degrees, which is your average gas grill's highest heat.

What are the best pellets for smokers?

The pellet grill brand you buy will likely direct you to its own line of pellets, but the most important thing to consider is the term "additive-free" pellets. Lower-grade pellets, especially those without this distinction, can encompass a lot of impurities (down to even plastics and industrial scraps) because pellets are often forged from sawdust in commercial spaces.

The type of wood you buy is highly subjective. Brands tend to recommend different blends or species of wood for different foods, though. Check out our full guide to the best smoker pellets for more recommendations.

Best overall: Traeger Pro 575 Pellet Grill

The Traeger Pro 575 Pellet Grill on a patio street side.

For under a thousand dollars, the Traeger Pro series retains heat than any other pellet grill in that price range.

Pros: Great temperature control, thicker steel than average, large wheels

Cons: WiFi connectivity could be better, LCD interface not as intuitive as others, not modular

If you want a hassle-free grill that can dazzle guests every bit as much as yourself, the Traeger Pro 575 pellet grill is an appliance made for the ages, and the heaviest-duty pellet grill we've found under a thousand dollars.

Heat retention and moderation are the most important things when it comes to the function of a grill. While the Traeger doesn't have the quarter-inch steel we like to see on a grill, it's far thicker and seals much better than anything else we've tried in this price range. We've kept temperatures steady within five degrees of our target temps in all kinds of weather, something even an experienced griller would have a devil of a time doing with charcoal or wood.

The Pro's temps range from 180 degrees Fahrenheit, which is just right for low-and-slow cooking, up to 500, which won't get a sear, but will effectively braise. This is where the Traeger Pro series might fall short against more modular grills, including Traeger's Timberline series, which comes with an induction side burner, or Camp Chef's Woodwind series, which we recommend for a more versatile option.

But for the price, the Traeger Pro series grills hold heat best and are built for the long haul, so if you're working with a moderate budget and primarily want to use the grill for barbecuing (or as an oven) you needn't look further.

Read our full review of the Traeger 575 Pro pellet grillhere.

Best budget: Z Grills Pioneer 450B Pellet Grill and Smoker

The Z Grills Pioneer 450B pellet grill on a patio.

Z Grills' line of pellet smokers doesn't use the thickest steel, but it is comparable to the steel found in grills twice their price or more.

Pros: Good build quality for price, steady temperature, "smoke" setting allows for slightly lower temperature than rating (170 degrees), comes with a cover

Cons: Some backdraft and auger burn can happen (but corrects itself), leaks some smoke, no WiFi

We've been testing budget pellet grills for more than two years, and while the shortcomings of others were quick to show, the Z Grill 450B didn't have the same trouble regulating temperature that we found elsewhere. This grill was also easier to assemble than many other options within this price range and beyond. Temperatures range from 180 to 450 degrees Fahrenheit, but the "smoke" setting lets you cheat temperatures down to 170, which we love for extra low-and-slow cooking.

Some people might wish for the WiFi in Traeger and Camp Chef grills, but if you're keeping with a budget, you really don't need the extra electronics on your pellet smoker. Careful positioning of the grill near enough to read an LCD screen or run a Bluetooth- or WiFi-enabled temperature probe can stand in for built-in electronics.

The real downside of this grill is that it's not very well sealed, so smoke seeps out. The quick fix for that is to add your own gaskets (a good solution for most grills, frankly), and Lavalock is a great option. We checked with grilling experts on the matter who said that the smoke leak can happen, but the fire won't burn its way past the auger.

If you're looking to barbecue for a small group of eight people and don't want to spend too much or fuss with gadgetry or accessories, the Z Grills 450B is a great, simple, and affordable solution.

Best upgrade: Traeger Timberline Pellet Grill

The Traeger Timberline XL Grill with the lid open and bottom doors ajar to show the grates and ash keg.

Setting up this grill is as easy as pellet-grill assembly gets, and the handrails and shelves are sturdy and offer extra storage.

Pros: Extremely strong wifi connectivity, impeccably even cooking, great gasket and seal, induction side burner, storage, built-in compatibility

Cons: For the price, we wish the steel was thicker, accessorizing gets expensive, small casters

If you want the most flawless barbecue with the least amount of effort, the Traeger Timberline series (go for the XL if you have the space) is as good as it gets. It goes without saying that you'll pay dearly for it, but purchasing a cover and taking cursory care will keep this grill going for many years to come.

However, be forewarned that the Timberline is exceptionally heavy at over 250 pounds. To that point, this is a true outdoor cooking station, minus a sink — it's not something you're going to want to cart around your backyard, but rather leave in place on a solid surface. Where a heavy-duty offset smoker with wagon wheels is your rough-and-ready all-terrain utility Jeep, the Timberline is more like a Cadillac.

Veteran grillers will find it hard to wrap their heads around spending more than $3000 on a pellet grill, especially one with relatively thin metal. This grill simply isn't for them, but it is for anyone who wants as hands-off and foolproof of an experience as possible.

While the grill does a good job of keeping steady temperature and cooking evenly, the metal on the firebox is surprisingly thin, especially compared with the quarter-inch-thick stuff you'll find on charcoal or stick-burning pit grills around the same price. Accessorizing, starting with the $200 purchase of a grill cover, is almost prohibitively expensive.

Still, this is the best of nearly a dozen pellet smokers and grills I've tried, and it's built to last better than any other, too.

Read our full review of the Traeger Timberline series here.

Best charcoal: Masterbuilt Gravity Series 1050

An open Masterbuilt Gravity Series 1050 charcoal grill filled with hot dogs, hot dog buns, and more.

For those wanting a smokier result than wood pellets produce, this is an easy and affordable way to achieve charcoal flavor and heat.

Pros: Large cooking area for firebox size, charcoal imparts more flavor than wood pellets

Cons: Difficult to assemble, thin metal, only a 1-year warranty

Tending a charcoal fire is much easier said than done, and in almost every case of disappointing or failed grilling attempts, it is the cause of the downfall. Masterbuilt's towering Gravity Series is an imposing appliance with a large hopper and feeder that, with the help of WiFi connectivity, works just like a pellet smoker, but for charcoal.

Why go with charcoal over wood pellets? Many cooks argue that charcoal offers more flavor, but it's also a simple fact that charcoal burns much, much hotter than wood pellets. The Gravity Series ranges from about 150 degrees Fahrenheit (a great temperature for low-and-slow smoking) all the way up to about 700 degrees, which is ideal for searing — something pellet grills can't generally do.

Ultimately, it's a grill, griddle, and a (higher-temp) smoker all in one. It also has two-sided cast-iron grates, with one thinner side dedicated to smoking and the thicker one for searing.

Monitoring the temperature with WiFi and Bluetooth was easy, and connectivity is about as steady as most grills we've tested — we couldn't go around the corner to the store, but we stayed connected around the house, adjusting temperature and even turning the grill off (though we recommend doing that in person).

The Masterbuilt Gravity Series grill has a few downsides like any other. Firstly, it's made of relatively lightweight metal, which isn't good for heat retention or longevity, and secondly, it took more than two hours to build. Expectedly, temperatures tend to fluctuate more than they do in a wood-pellet smoker, but that's charcoal for you (briquettes will burn more evenly than hardwood lump).

Best versatile: Camp Chef Woodwind 24 Pellet Grill

A close cropped image of the Camp Chef Woodwind grill in a backyard patio.

If you're furnishing your patio with grilling equipment on a budget under $10,000, the Camp Chef Woodwind has a tough catalog to beat.

Pros: Highly modular, the brand offers many relatively affordable accessories

Cons: Thin metal, can have a hard time keeping steady temperature in a stiff breeze or cold temps

Camp Chef was one of the first pellet-grill brands on the market. While we find other options more suitable for the aspiring griller, the list of accessories and modularity of the Woodwind series reaches far beyond any other brand.

The Woodwind grill operates basically and efficiently, and the interface is easy to navigate and has a strong WiFi connection. It's the accessories, starting with the Blanket and up to the 28,000-btu, cast-aluminum Sidekick side burner, Flat Top, Sear box, and Pizza Oven (available with a single and double burner) that win us over. With this setup, there's little you can't do with this grill in your backyard — all at a reasonable price.

We have found that with a stiff breeze or in sub-zero weather, this grill is hard to keep steady, though you'll do just fine in mild weather or a subtropical climate. Even so, the Blanket helps solve for that impressively well, which is a great alternative to spending hundreds or even thousands more on a grill with thicker steel and a more robust seal.

Based on our testing and research over the past few years, if you want a one-stop grilling station in your backyard that you can customize for all intents and purposes but you don't want to break out thousands of dollars to do it, Camp Chef is your ticket.

Read our full review of the Camp Chef Woodwind series here.

What to look for in a pellet grill and smoker

What you want in a pellet grill and smoker will vary depending on how you'll use it and where you'll keep it. Below are the main considerations:

Interface: An increasing number of grills offer state-of-the-art Wifi or Bluetooth connectivity that allow you to monitor your brisket anywhere from your deck to miles away. However, there are some that use simpler controls and don't require you to add another application to your phone. Tech gadgetry doesn't always correspond to better performance, so it's about your preference and cooking style.

Accessories: Many of the grills we tested don't offer a ton of extras, or require you to purchase them separately. If you are looking for a one-stop outdoor kitchen (minus the sink), be prepared to spend more for a side burner and extra shelves. The Traeger Timberline and the Camp Chef Woodwind series have the most extra features of the grills we tested.

Size: Grills are best measured in cooking surface area, usually in square inches of space. Smaller models in the 450 to 575-square-inch range offer plenty of space for four to six people, and larger ones, above 800 square inches, can cook for roughly a dozen people or more. It all depends on what you're cooking. Brands show diagrams of their grill layouts, depicting how many pork shoulders, chicken wings, briskets, and/or hamburger patties they'll hold.

How we tested

Someone pouring compressed wood pellets into the hopper of a Traeger Timberline XL Grill.

We spent more than two years building and testing pellet grills and smokers, speaking with experts like veteran TV host and author Steven Raichlen, Hey Grill Hey! founder Susie Bulloch, and Chef Shola Olunloyo of Studio Kitchen to find out what makes a good pellet grill and for whom they're made. Considering our own experience and their recommendations, we evaluated grills by cooking chicken drumsticks and pork shoulders "low and slow" and grilling zucchini at a higher heat:

Temperature control: We found that the best grills ranged only about five degrees on either side of our target temperature, while some, especially those with thinner lids and fireboxes, varied as much as 30 degrees. Almost invariably, the quality of heat retention went up with the price of the grill. That said, installing quality gaskets on your own is a cheap and easy way to upgrade any grill.

Build quality: We considered the quality of materials as we built each grill, noting when metal was flimsier or more prone to denting. We also left each model out in the elements — some for more than two years on end. None of the grills or the electronics we've tested have failed.

Smokiness: We were told by our experts to look for a smoke ring on bigger cuts of meat, like pork shoulders, which we smoked for up to nine hours (roughly one hour per pound), or until an internal temperature of 203 degrees F. While pellet grills impart nowhere near as much smokiness as charcoal or hardwood fires, grills with better seals produced deep, red rings, whereas others were more akin to oven cooking and gave almost no smoke flavor.

Ease of use: From building and connectivity to operating and cleaning, we looked at the process of owning and maintaining these grills. Cleaning grills can be a pain, but a great workaround for almost all of them is a disposable aluminum tray, or lining the grill's catch pan with tin foil. This keeps grease off the grill, makes cleanup a breeze, and helps prolong the life of the firebox.

Value: Many of the grills we tested came with limited accessories, some of them essential. While the budget-friendly pick on our list does come with a cover (that's survived two years outside), every other grill we tested required a cover be purchased separately. Add on shelves, hooks, and/or brackets that really should be included, and it gets expensive quickly. Still, build quality and warranty balanced out these pricier picks.

Pellet grill FAQs

An open Traeger Timberline Grill showing chicken drumsticks and pork being cooked.

How do pellet grills work?

Pellet grills have a hopper that feeds an auger, which grinds compressed hardwood pellets into smaller chunks that fall into and ignite in a firebox, creating smoke.

What's the difference between a pellet grill and a pellet smoker?

Pellet grill and pellet smoker can be used interchangeably. Grills tend to work with direct heat, while smokers often use indirect heat. Modern pellet grills strike a balance between grills and smokers because they range between low-and-slow cooking temperatures (160-225 degrees Fahrenheit or so) and about 500 degrees, which is your average gas grill's highest heat.

What are the best pellets for pellet grilling?

The pellet-grill brand you buy will likely direct you to its own line of pellets, but the most important thing to consider is the term "additive-free" pellets. Lower grade pellets, especially those without this distinction, can encompass a lot of impurities (down to even plastics and industrial scraps) because pellets are often forged from sawdust in commercial spaces.

The type of wood you buy is something to give thought to as well, but becomes highly subjective. Brands tend to recommend different blends or species of wood for different foods, though.

The post The 6 best pellet grills of 2025, tested and reviewed appeared first on Business Insider