By Andy | BarbecueMen.com | Updated 2026
Let me be straight with you: I’ve cooked on a lot of cheap grills. Some were fine. Some were an embarrassment — thin shells that rattled in the wind, ignitions that failed after two months, and BTU numbers big enough to impress anyone who doesn’t know better.
But here’s what I’ve learned after 10 years of testing, owning, and occasionally cursing at gas grills: the $400 price point is where things start to get real.
Under $400, you can now find grills with solid stainless burners, decent heat retention, genuine searing capability, and warranties that actually mean something. You don’t need to spend $700 to get a grill that performs — but you do need to know what to look for and what to run from.
The Monument Mesa II 415BZ is the best overall gas grill under $400. It offers 4 burners, a dedicated sear zone, and a 10-year warranty for ~$379. Need maximum space on a budget? The Nexgrill 720-0925P (~$279) is the unbeatable value pick.
Short on time? Here’s where I’d put my money depending on what you need:
| Grill | Best For | Cook Area | BTUs | Why It Wins | Price | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Monument Mesa II 415BZ | Aspiring Pitmaster | 428 sq. in. | 35,000 | 4 burners + sear zone, fast preheat | ~$379 | View |
| Nexgrill 720-0925P | First Homeowner Special | 768 sq. in. | 48,000 | Unbeatable value, huge space | ~$279 | View |
| Char-Broil FlavorMax 2-Burner | Small Patio/Apartment | 300 sq. in. | 24,000 | Compact, even heat, foldable | ~$249 | View |
| Weber Q 3200 | Rust-Zone Longevity | 393 sq. in. | 21,700 | Cast aluminum, exceptional life | ~$399 | View |
| Coleman RoadTrip 285 | Tailgate King | 285 sq. in. | 20,000 | 3 burners, portable, indirect heat | ~$199 | View |
Let’s get into the grills themselves. I’ll give you an honest breakdown of what each one does well, where it falls short, and most importantly — who it’s actually right for.
“The Aspiring Pitmaster on a Budget”
If I had to recommend one grill in this entire price range for someone who wants to cook seriously — not just grill burgers on a Saturday afternoon — it would be the Monument Mesa II 415BZ. And it’s not a close call.
Here’s the reality: most grills under $400 give you four burners OR decent build quality OR a sear zone. The Monument gives you all three. That’s rare.
I smoked a spatchcocked chicken using indirect heat — one side on low, one side off — and the results were excellent. Skin was crispy, internal temp hit 165°F evenly, no hotspots. For steaks, the sear zone gets hot enough to get that crust without cranking all four burners.
Anyone serious about backyard cooking who doesn’t want to blow $600+ to get real performance.
You’re only grilling 4–5 times a year and just need something basic. Save $100 with the Nexgrill below.
“The First Homeowner Special”
If the Monument is the overachiever, the Nexgrill 720-0925P is the smart shopper’s pick. It’s usually priced between $250–$299, which means you’ve got budget left over for a grill cover, a propane tank, and a solid set of BBQ tools. That matters more than people think.
First-time homeowners, casual grillers, and anyone who wants maximum cooking space without stretching the budget.
You’re serious about BBQ craft or live somewhere with harsh winters and plan to leave the grill outside year-round.
“The Small Patio/Apartment Hero”
Most compact grills are a compromise. You get limited space, uneven heat, and the experience of cooking on something that feels like an afterthought. The Char-Broil FlavorMax 2-Burner is a genuine exception.
Apartment balconies, small patios, couples, or anyone who grills for 1–2 people most of the time.
You’re feeding more than 4 people regularly or want to do bigger cooks like brisket or whole chickens.
“The Rust-Zone Hero”
Here’s something worth knowing in 2026: the Weber Spirit II E-310 regularly climbs to $450–$500 now. If you want Weber quality and you’re sticking to a $400 budget, the Weber Q 3200 is your move. It’s a different kind of grill — but in the right hands, it’s exceptional.
Anyone in a coastal area, humid climate, or rust-prone environment. Also ideal for buyers who want a grill they’ll still be happy with in 2031.
You need lots of cooking space, cabinet storage, or a side burner. Look at the Monument or Nexgrill instead.
“The Tailgate King”
Most portable grills are glorified camp stoves. They get hot in one spot and nothing else. The Coleman RoadTrip 285 is in a different category, and it’s not really close.
I cooked chicken thighs low and slow on this at a campsite using two-zone cooking — burners one and three on, middle off — and they came out properly cooked, not cremated. That’s what separates this from every other portable grill.
Tailgaters, campers, and anyone who wants a portable grill that can actually grill — not just heat things up.
This isn’t your primary backyard grill. If you’re grilling at home more than once a week, invest in a larger model.
I want to be honest with you, because nobody else in this space usually is. The average lifespan of a budget gas grill — one in the $200–$350 range — is 2 to 5 years. Better-built grills in the $350–$400 range, maintained properly, can push 7–8 years.
The biggest difference between a $300 grill and a $900 grill isn’t maximum temperature. It’s consistency and durability. Keep that in mind when setting expectations.
Manufacturers love to put big BTU numbers on the box because consumers respond to them. Don’t fall for it.
BTUs measure the maximum gas consumption of the burners — not cooking quality. A poorly built 50,000 BTU grill with thin metal and bad heat tents will cook worse than a quality 35,000 BTU grill with proper heat distribution design. Every time.
If a grill feels tinny when you tap it in the store, it’ll struggle in the wind at home. Thin metal leaks heat, warps under repeated high-heat use, and makes it nearly impossible to maintain stable cooking temperatures on a breezy day. Always feel the lid and the firebox sides. Heavier metal is a reliable sign of a better build.
A grill that won’t light reliably is a grill you’ll use less — and eventually stop using. Cheap piezo ignition systems are notoriously unreliable after 1–2 seasons, especially in damp climates. Look for electronic ignition with a proven track record (Weber is the standard here) and always buy a backup long-stemmed lighter just in case.
Heavier grills retain heat better, resist warping, cook more evenly, and last longer. If you’re comparing two grills side by side, lift the lid. The heavier option is usually the better build — though obviously weight alone isn’t everything.
Every budget grill has some variation in heat across the cooking surface. The question is how much. Ask yourself: can I cook chicken breasts across the whole grill and have them all hit 165°F at roughly the same time? On the better models here — the Monument and the Weber especially — the answer is yes.
A 1-year warranty on a budget grill is not reassuring. Monument’s 10-year warranty and Weber’s multi-year coverage are standouts. Also check that replacement parts (burners, heat tents, ignition) are available and reasonably priced. A grill you can’t get parts for is eventually a landfill donation.
Propane dominates this price category, and for good reason. Propane grills are portable, easy to set up, and deliver better consistent BTU output than natural gas at equivalent pressures. Every grill on this list runs on propane, and for most backyard cooks, that’s exactly what you want.
Standard 20 lb. propane tanks last roughly 18–20 hours of grilling — about a full summer of weekend use before you need a refill.
I can’t write a gas grill guide without talking about the Weber Spirit E-310. It’s the benchmark that everyone in this category gets compared to — and for good reason.
| Factor | Weber Spirit E-310 | Budget Grills Under $400 |
|---|---|---|
| Durability | ✓ Outlasts by years | ~ Varies heavily |
| Burner Consistency | ✓ GS4 system is excellent | ~ Usually less even |
| Warranty | ✓ Generous coverage | ~ Monument competes here |
| Cooking Experience | ✓ Noticeably more consistent | ✗ More hotspots |
| Price | ✗ $450–$500+ | ✓ Significantly cheaper |
Sometimes an extra $50–$100 makes a meaningful difference. Here’s what you generally get when you move from the $400 to the $450 range:
At the top of this range, two models stand out:
Here’s something most people don’t think about until it’s too late: the grill you buy is only as good as the care you give it. I’ve seen $600 grills ruined in two seasons by neglect, and I’ve seen $300 grills last seven or eight years with basic maintenance.
I ran these grills through the scenarios that actually matter for a home cook. Here’s what I found:
The Monument Mesa II hit 500°F in under 6 minutes — the best in this group. The Nexgrill hit 450°F in about 8 minutes. The Weber Q 3200 was slower to climb but maintained temperature more steadily once there.
For a proper sear on a 1.5″ ribeye, you need consistent high heat. The Monument’s dedicated sear zone delivered a proper Maillard crust. The Nexgrill got close at the hottest spot. The Weber Q 3200 surprised me — its cast iron grates retained so much heat that even without a dedicated sear zone, it produced excellent results.
This is where budget grills typically fail — and where the Monument really stood out. I placed six bone-in chicken thighs across the grill surface. All six hit 165°F within 2 minutes of each other. On the Nexgrill, the ones near the back burner ran a few degrees hotter and I had to rotate them halfway through.
The Monument recovered heat noticeably faster after opening the lid than the Nexgrill. For high-volume cooking — burgers for a crowd, multiple rounds of chicken — that preheat recovery matters.
Lighter grills struggle in the wind. The Monument and Weber held temperature well in moderate wind. The Nexgrill lost 50–75 degrees when a decent gust hit and took 3–4 minutes to recover. If you grill outdoors in a typically breezy spot, weight and build quality become even more important.
The Monument’s grease management system funneled drippings cleanly to the collection tray. The Nexgrill’s tray is easy to remove and clean. The Weber Q 3200 has Weber’s famously well-designed drip system — simple and effective.
For most people, the Monument Mesa II 415BZ is the best overall gas grill under $400 in 2026. It combines 4 burners, a dedicated sear zone, solid construction, and a 10-year warranty at a price point that usually lands under $400. If budget is the primary concern, the Nexgrill 720-0925P delivers incredible cooking area and basic performance for around $279.
They can be — with realistic expectations. A grill in the $200–$250 range will cook burgers and hot dogs just fine. But if you want to smoke, sear, or cook large pieces of meat properly, you need at least $300–$400 and a grill with better build quality. The cheap ones also tend to develop problems after 2–3 seasons.
A budget grill ($200–$300 range) typically lasts 2–5 years with basic care. A mid-range grill ($350–$400+) with proper maintenance can last 6–8 years or more. Weber and Napoleon grills are known to last 10+ years. The biggest factors: how often you clean it, whether you use a cover, and the quality of the burners.
For 1–4 people, a 2-burner grill is absolutely enough. You can still do two-zone cooking with two burners, and most 2-burner grills in this price range have 280–350 sq. in. of cooking space — plenty for a family meal. If you regularly cook for groups of 6+, go for 3 or 4 burners.
Weber is better in almost every measurable way: durability, heat consistency, burner longevity, and long-term value. But Weber costs significantly more. Nexgrill wins on upfront value and cooking area per dollar. If you’re a casual griller who replaces their grill every 4–5 years anyway, Nexgrill makes sense. If you want a grill that lasts a decade, buy Weber.
The honest answer: not always. Conversion kits from unknown brands can be inconsistent in pressure ratings and orifice sizing, which creates safety risks. Even reputable conversion kits may void your grill’s warranty. If you need natural gas, buy a purpose-built natural gas model. The extra cost is worth it for the safety and reliability.
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