Vulcan vs Imperial vs Garland: Which Restaurant Range Is Worth the Money (2026)

The wrong range costs you twice

A six-burner range bought wrong costs you twice — once in the sticker price, again in the parts-and-service bill that follows. Vulcan is the operator-default workhorse with the deepest service network. Imperial is the value play for budget-constrained openings. Garland carries premium build but premium price and a thinner U.S. service network. The right pick depends on your service-tech availability, your menu’s BTU profile, and your 5-year vs 10-year horizon. This guide walks through the conditions where each one wins, with TCO math and a verdict matrix at the end.


What changes the answer: 4 qualifying conditions

Before any brand comparison, four variables decide the range:

  1. Volume cooks per hour at peak. Below 50 covers/hour, all three brands can work. Above 100, BTU per burner and oven recovery matter heavily.
  2. Menu type. Wok / high-heat menus need higher per-burner BTU (≥ 30,000). Standard sauté / sauce kitchens are happy at 25,000–28,000. Pastry / low-volume griddle work tolerates less.
  3. Local service-tech availability. The brand whose certified tech is 30 minutes from your kitchen wins, regardless of the unit’s spec sheet.
  4. 5-year vs 10-year ROI horizon. Lower-build ranges may save $1,500 today and cost $4,000 in service over 5 years. Higher-build ranges flip the math at the 7-year mark.

Vulcan SX / GH-series — the operator default

Vulcan is the most-installed commercial range in U.S. independent restaurants for one reason: parts and service are everywhere. Vulcan is owned by Illinois Tool Works (ITW), the same parent as Hobart. Their service network spans virtually every metropolitan area. A Vulcan SX-6 (6-burner gas range with standard oven) lists at $4,500–$6,000 depending on configuration, with 26,000-BTU open burners standard.

Strengths:

  • Deepest U.S. service network — almost any restaurant supply tech can repair a Vulcan. Replacement parts ship same-day from Heritage Parts and Parts Town.
  • Cast-iron grates and burner caps are heavy-duty (the SX-series specifically — verify the model line; the lighter EG- and GH-series differ).
  • Standard 7″ w.c. natural gas pressure requirement matches typical kitchen supply.
  • Resale value holds — used Vulcans command 50–60% of new pricing in good condition.

Weaknesses:

  • Mid-tier max burner output (26,000 BTU); not ideal for wok-heavy menus.
  • Cosmetic finish less premium than Garland — looks utilitarian.
  • Open-burner pilot ignition can be temperamental in high-humidity kitchens.

Best for: Independent diners, family restaurants, full-service kitchens doing 50–150 covers/hour with varied American or European menus. Multi-unit operators who need standardized parts inventory across locations.

Affiliate: Vulcan SX-6 — 6-burner gas range on WebstaurantStore | KaTom alternative listing.


Imperial IR-6 — the value pick

Imperial is roughly 25–35% cheaper than Vulcan on equivalent specs, with most of the durability and weaker service network. An Imperial IR-6 lists at $3,200–$4,200, with 32,000-BTU burners (notably higher than Vulcan SX) and a heavy-duty 1″ thick cooking surface.

Strengths:

  • Highest per-burner BTU in this comparison (32,000) — better for wok work, fast heat-up, high-volume sauté.
  • Significantly lower acquisition cost than Vulcan or Garland.
  • Heavy build for the price — 12-gauge stainless construction.
  • 1-year parts + 90-day labor warranty (standard among this tier).

Weaknesses:

  • Service network thinner than Vulcan — you may pay more per service call because fewer techs are certified, and parts can take 3–5 days vs Vulcan’s same-day.
  • Manifold-style ignition (vs individual pilots on premium brands) means a single ignition failure can affect multiple burners.
  • Resale value lower (typical 35–45% of new in used market).

Best for: Budget-constrained openings (first-restaurant operators, ghost kitchens, low-margin concepts), wok / high-heat kitchens needing the BTU boost, and operators in areas with at least one Imperial-certified tech within 60 minutes.

Affiliate: Imperial IR-6 on WebstaurantStore | Imperial IR-6 on KaTom.


Garland G-series — the premium pick

Garland (owned by Welbilt / Ali Group) is the premium build in this comparison, with European pedigree and a price tag to match. A Garland G-Series 6-burner lists at $5,500–$8,000+, with 32,000–34,000 BTU burners, brass valve construction, and a 2-year parts warranty.

Strengths:

  • Brass-valve construction lasts longer than the cast-aluminum valves common on lower-tier ranges.
  • Higher-thermal-mass cast-iron grates retain heat better between batches.
  • 2-year parts warranty (vs 1-year industry standard).
  • Premium cosmetic finish — fits open-kitchen / high-end concept aesthetics.
  • Higher BTU output than Vulcan SX-6 (32,000+ vs 26,000).

Weaknesses:

  • Significantly higher acquisition cost.
  • Service network in U.S. is thinner than Vulcan — Garland’s primary service strength is in commercial-chain accounts (large QSR brands), less so in independent operations.
  • Parts pricing is 30–50% higher than Vulcan equivalent components.
  • Some operators report the open-burner aluminum bowls warp more than Vulcan’s at high heat.

Best for: Fine-dining concepts where the range is visible (open kitchen), high-volume cooking lines where the BTU advantage justifies the premium, multi-unit chain operations with Garland-specific service contracts. Generally not the right pick for a budget-constrained first restaurant.

Affiliate: Garland G-Series on WebstaurantStore | KaTom listing.


Head-to-head spec comparison

Spec Vulcan SX-6 Imperial IR-6 Garland G-6
Burner BTU (each) 26,000 32,000 32,000–34,000
Oven BTU 30,000 30,000 30,000
Cooking surface gauge 14-gauge stainless 12-gauge stainless 14-gauge stainless
Grate material Cast iron Cast iron Heavy cast iron
Valve construction Standard Cast aluminum Brass
Parts warranty 1 year 1 year 2 years
Listed price (2026) $4,500–$6,000 $3,200–$4,200 $5,500–$8,000+
U.S. service network Deepest Mid Thinner (operator-side)
Avg service calls/year (operator-reported) 1–2 2–4 1–2

TCO math over 5 years

A worked example assuming 100 covers/hour at peak, 6 days/week, 50 weeks/year:

Vulcan SX-6 Imperial IR-6 Garland G-6
Acquisition (incl. install) $5,200 $3,800 $6,700
Service calls × $250/call (5-yr est.) $1,750 $3,500 $1,500
Parts replacement (5-yr est.) $800 $1,200 $1,400
Energy (gas, 5-yr at $1.50/therm) $4,500 $4,800 $4,600
5-year TCO $12,250 $13,300 $14,200

Imperial wins on sticker, loses on service. Vulcan is the lowest 5-year TCO at typical volume. Garland’s premium build pays back at the 7–10 year horizon if you keep the unit longer.


The verdict

Vulcan SX-6 is the right pick for ~70% of independent operators — best service network + middle pricing + reliable build. Default to Vulcan unless one of the conditions below applies.

Pick Imperial IR-6 instead if: budget is the binding constraint AND there’s at least one Imperial-certified service tech within 60 minutes of your kitchen, OR your menu is wok-heavy enough that the 6,000-BTU per-burner advantage matters daily.

Pick Garland G-6 instead if: the range is visible in an open kitchen and aesthetics matter to your concept, OR you operate a fine-dining / high-volume kitchen where the brass valves and 2-year warranty pay back over 8+ years, OR you’re a multi-unit operator with chain-level Garland service contracts already in place.

When the answer flips

The default verdict (Vulcan) flips in three scenarios:

  1. Wok-heavy or hibachi-style menus — Imperial’s 32,000-BTU burners or Garland’s premium burners outperform Vulcan SX’s 26,000 noticeably. Vulcan loses here.
  2. Open kitchen / visible range — Vulcan looks utilitarian. If the range is part of the dining experience, Garland’s finish and Imperial’s heavier construction read better. Vulcan loses on aesthetics.
  3. Single-unit budget opening with reliable local Imperial service — when capital is tight and the brand-tier difference is < $3,000, Imperial often beats Vulcan over 3 years. Vulcan loses on cash flow.

Frequently asked questions

1. Is Wolf the same as Vulcan?
Wolf Range (commercial) is a separate product line owned by ITW, distinct from Wolf (residential, Sub-Zero/Wolf). Wolf Challenger XL is roughly equivalent to Vulcan SX in build but priced higher; many operators consider it interchangeable on parts.

2. What about Southbend?
Southbend (now part of Middleby) is a credible fourth option — slightly less common than the three covered here, but with comparable build to Vulcan. Service network varies by region. Worth getting a quote alongside Vulcan if your local dealer carries it.

3. How much should I budget for a 10-burner instead of 6?
Roughly 50–70% more than the 6-burner equivalent. Vulcan SX-10 lists at $7,000–$9,500; Imperial IR-10 at $5,000–$6,500; Garland G-10 at $9,000–$13,000.

4. Can I run a 6-burner range on residential gas service?
No. Commercial 6-burners need 7″ w.c. natural gas pressure at the appliance and a 1/2″ or 3/4″ supply line depending on total BTU load. Residential gas service is typically inadequate. Verify with your gas utility before purchase. (See Commercial Gas Line Sizing.)

5. Should I buy used?
Used Vulcan SX in good condition with documented service history — yes, often a great deal at 50–60% of new. Used Imperial — riskier given thinner service network. Used Garland — only with full service history; parts cost makes neglected Garlands expensive to revive.

6. What if I need induction instead?
None of the three offer induction at the 6-burner range scale meaningfully in 2026. CookTek and Vollrath dominate commercial induction. See Induction vs Gas Range: TCO Over 10 Years.


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