Hobart vs Champion vs Jackson Commercial Dishwashers (2026)

All three brands work; the differences show up in your service-call frequency

Hobart, Champion, and Jackson all build commercial dishwashers that meet NSF/ANSI 3 and pass health-inspection. The differences are in service-network depth, parts pricing, build quality at price point, and 10-year reliability. Hobart is the operator default — most-installed, best service network, premium price. Champion is the value performer — most of Hobart’s reliability for 15–25% less. Jackson is the budget pick — aggressive pricing, slightly thinner service network. The right call depends on your local certified-tech availability and your capital horizon.


What changes the answer

  1. Local service-tech reality — the brand whose certified tech is 30 minutes away wins, regardless of which one is “best on paper.”
  2. Capital constraint — if budget is binding, Jackson saves $2,500–$4,000 vs Hobart equivalent on a door-type install.
  3. Volume profile — at very high volume (200+ racks/hour conveyor), Hobart’s CL-series has the deepest reliability track record.
  4. Multi-unit standardization — multi-unit operators benefit from one brand for parts/training. Most pick Hobart for the depth.

Hobart AM-15 / CL44e — the operator default

Hobart owns U.S. commercial dishwashing market share for one reason: their service network and parts depth are unmatched. Owned by ITW (same parent as Vulcan). AM-15 (door-type, 35 racks/hour) lists at $7,800–$10,500. CL44e (conveyor, 200+ racks/hour) lists at $22,000–$32,000.

Strengths:

  • Deepest U.S. service network — Hobart-certified techs in virtually every metro area
  • Premium build, 14-gauge stainless construction
  • Heat-recovery technology on newer AM-15 (uses exhaust heat to pre-warm incoming water — saves 15–20% energy)
  • 1-year parts + 1-year labor warranty (premium-tier coverage)
  • Resale value strong — 50–60% of new in working condition

Weaknesses:

  • Highest acquisition cost in this comparison
  • Replacement parts pricing 25–40% above Champion equivalent
  • Some operators find Hobart’s controls less intuitive than Champion’s

Best for: Multi-unit operators standardizing across locations, operations where downtime cost is high, urban markets with deep Hobart service network.

Affiliate: Hobart AM-15 on WebstaurantStore | Hobart on KaTom.


Champion DH-2000 / USN — the value performer

Champion has been the operator’s value pick in U.S. dishwashing for decades. The DH-2000 (door-type, 30–40 racks/hour) lists at $6,500–$9,000 — roughly 15–20% below Hobart equivalent with most of the durability. USN (conveyor, 175–225 racks/hour) at $18,000–$26,000.

Strengths:

  • Lower acquisition cost than Hobart with comparable build
  • Champion’s controls are widely considered the most intuitive in the category
  • Solid service network in most U.S. markets — slightly thinner than Hobart but well-established
  • Heat-pump rinse option on newer DH-2000 versions
  • 1-year parts warranty standard

Weaknesses:

  • Service network is regional in some markets — verify local Champion-certified tech before purchase
  • Resale value slightly lower than Hobart (40–50% of new)
  • Some early failures reported on the DH-2000 booster heater (worth the extended warranty if offered)

Best for: Independent restaurants, mid-size operations, operators who want premium feature set without Hobart’s price premium. The default for ~50% of independent full-service operators.

Affiliate: Champion DH-2000 on WebstaurantStore | Champion on KaTom.


Jackson AJ-44 / CREW — the budget pick

Jackson competes aggressively on price. AJ-44 (door-type, 35–45 racks/hour) lists at $5,500–$8,000 — roughly 25–35% below Hobart equivalent. CREW (conveyor) at $16,000–$23,000.

Strengths:

  • Lowest acquisition cost in this comparison among major brands
  • Reasonable build for the price — 16-gauge stainless (vs Hobart’s 14-gauge)
  • Extended Energy Plus models are ENERGY STAR-qualified
  • Solid in budget-constrained openings, ghost kitchens, multi-unit secondary locations

Weaknesses:

  • Service network thinner than Hobart or Champion — fewer certified techs, longer parts lead time in some regions
  • Some operators report higher annual service-call frequency than Hobart equivalent
  • Aluminum-bodied chemical pumps tend to fail earlier than the brass pumps on premium tier
  • Resale value lower (35–45% of new)

Best for: Budget-constrained openings, ghost kitchens, secondary locations in multi-unit operations (where the primary uses Hobart). Backup machines.

Affiliate: Jackson AJ-44 on WebstaurantStore | Jackson on KaTom.


Head-to-head: door-type comparison

Spec Hobart AM-15 Champion DH-2000 Jackson AJ-44
Racks/hour (peak) 35 30–40 35–45
Final rinse temp (high-temp model) 180°F 180°F 180°F
Booster heater Built-in (gas/electric) Built-in (electric standard) Built-in (electric)
Body construction 14-gauge stainless 16-gauge stainless 16-gauge stainless
Energy use (kWh/100 racks) ~5.2 (with heat recovery) ~5.5 ~5.8
Cycle time 60–90 sec 60–90 sec 60–90 sec
Listed price (2026) $7,800–$10,500 $6,500–$9,000 $5,500–$8,000
Service network (U.S.) Deepest Strong Mid-tier
Operator-reported service calls/year 1–2 1–3 2–4
Lifespan (operator-reported) 12–15 yr 10–13 yr 8–12 yr

TCO over 10 years (door-type, typical full-service operation)

Hobart AM-15 Champion DH-2000 Jackson AJ-44
Acquisition + install $9,200 $7,800 $6,800
Service (10 yr est.) $4,500 $5,200 $7,000
Replacement parts (10 yr) $1,500 $2,000 $2,800
Detergent + rinse aid (10 yr, similar across brands) $11,000 $11,000 $11,000
Energy (10 yr) $5,200 $5,500 $5,800
10-yr TCO $31,400 $31,500 $33,400

Sticker price differences largely wash out at 10 years. The defensible argument for Hobart isn’t price — it’s downtime risk reduction and parts availability when something fails. For a kitchen where dish-room outage means service stops, Hobart’s premium pays back. For lower-volume operations or ghost kitchens, Jackson’s lower capital is the better bet.


The verdict

Default for full-service operators: Champion DH-2000. Best price/performance balance. Most of Hobart’s reliability at lower acquisition.

Pick Hobart AM-15 instead if: multi-unit operations, downtime cost is high, urban market with strong Hobart service depth, or you’ll keep the unit 12+ years.

Pick Jackson AJ-44 instead if: budget is the binding constraint, ghost kitchen / secondary location, or backup machine to a primary Hobart/Champion.

When the answer flips

  • Very high volume (> 100 racks/hour): skip door-type entirely; you need conveyor. The brand decision then favors Hobart CL44e for its deeper conveyor service track record.
  • Low-temp operation (chemical sanitization): all three brands have low-temp variants. Champion is widely considered the easiest low-temp to operate due to control simplicity.

Frequently asked questions

1. What’s the actual difference between 14-gauge and 16-gauge stainless?
14-gauge is thicker (~0.075″) than 16-gauge (~0.062″). For a dishwasher chassis, 14-gauge resists denting and lasts longer. The functional difference shows up at year 8+ in heavy-use kitchens.

2. Can I run a high-temp dishwasher on residential water heater?
No. High-temp dishwashers need a dedicated booster to deliver 180°F final rinse. Built-in boosters (electric or gas) handle this — verify your electrical/gas service capacity matches.

3. Should I buy used?
Door-type used is rarely worth it (acquisition delta is small enough that new wins on warranty). Used conveyor at 50% of new from a documented operator (chain closure, restaurant liquidation) can be a great deal IF the wash arms, pumps, and booster are inspected.

4. Hobart vs Hobart Heritage parts — same?
Heritage Parts is an authorized parts supplier (third-party, multi-brand). Hobart’s own parts come direct from the manufacturer. Parts equivalent for most components; Heritage is faster-shipping in many regions.

5. What about CMA Dishmachines?
CMA is a credible fourth option at the budget tier — competes with Jackson on price. Service network is regional. Worth a quote if your dealer carries it, but Jackson is more commonly available.

6. Can I switch from high-temp to low-temp later?
Limited retrofit. Some manufacturer kits exist for high-temp door-types. Generally easier to specify correctly at purchase than retrofit.


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