I get asked this question more than almost any other at cookouts: “Andy, Pit Boss or Traeger?” And honestly, I get why people are stuck. These two brands dominate backyard pellet grilling for a reason — they both make genuinely good smokers, just with very different philosophies.
Here’s the short version before we dig in. Pit Boss builds bigger, heavier, more affordable grills, and they’re the only one of the two that lets you slide open the deflector and sear directly over flame. Traeger builds a cleaner, more consistent cooking experience with better app control and tighter temperature stability, and they charge you for it.
Neither one is “the wrong choice.” It really comes down to how you cook, what you value, and what you’re willing to spend. I’ve run both brands through everything from 3am brisket starts to backyard burger nights, and I’m going to walk you through exactly where each one earns its keep — and where it falls short — so you can buy with confidence instead of guessing.
Why do these two brands keep coming up in the same breath? Simple — they’re chasing two different halves of the same market. Traeger practically invented the wood pellet grill back in the 1980s and has spent decades refining the “set it, forget it” experience into something closer to a smart oven than a traditional smoker. Pit Boss, made by a company called Dansons, came along later with a mission to undercut that price tag while adding a feature Traeger still doesn’t offer on most models: real, open-flame searing. That single design fork explains almost every difference you’ll read about below.
Before you scroll further, ask yourself one honest question: what do you actually cook most often? If your answer is “low and slow — brisket, pulled pork, ribs, the occasional whole turkey,” temperature consistency probably matters more to you than sear power. If your answer includes “steaks, burgers, or anything I want a hard char on,” that changes the math considerably. Keep that answer in your back pocket as we go through the details, because it’s going to point you toward one brand faster than any spec sheet will.
| Feature | Pit Boss | Traeger |
|---|---|---|
| Starting price | ~$400 (DX 700 / Sportsman) | ~$700 (Westwood) |
| Build quality | Heavy-gauge steel, thicker overall | Solid 16-gauge steel, cleaner finish |
| Cooking area | Larger for the price (up to 1,600+ sq in on the Titan) | Smaller footprint per dollar, but more even heat |
| Temperature range | 150–500°F (25° increments on most models) | 165–500°F (5° increments on WiFIRE models) |
| Hopper capacity | 18–40 lb depending on model | 18–24 lb depending on model |
| Controller type | Digital/PID (varies by series) | PID with WiFIRE on nearly every current model |
| Wi-Fi availability | Included on most current models | Standard across almost the entire lineup |
| Direct flame grilling | Yes — Flame Broiler slide plate, up to 1,000°F | No — convection heat only, tops out around 500°F |
| Warranty | 5 years on most grills | 3–10 years depending on series |
| Best for | Budget-conscious buyers who want to sear and smoke on one grill | Buyers who want the most consistent, hands-off cooking experience |
This is the one difference that actually changes how you cook, so let’s start here.
Traeger’s whole design philosophy is convection. Air moves through the cook chamber, wraps around your food, and holds a steady temperature the same way a good oven does. On the WiFIRE-connected models, that means 5-degree increments and a PID controller doing constant micro-adjustments in the background. I’ve run an Ironwood through a 14-hour brisket cook in genuinely bad weather and watched it hold within a few degrees the entire time. That kind of consistency is hard to argue with when you’re smoking overnight and want to actually sleep.
Pit Boss takes a different approach. Most models adjust in 25-degree increments rather than 5, so you won’t get quite the same fine-tuned control — and on entry-level models, expect some temperature swing, especially in windy or cold conditions. But here’s what Pit Boss has that Traeger doesn’t: the Flame Broiler, a physical slide-plate that opens a window straight down to the fire pot. Slide it open and you’re cooking over real, open flame up to 1,000°F. Slide it shut and you’re back to indirect convection cooking.
That matters more than it sounds like on paper. If you want to reverse-sear a steak — smoke it low and slow, then finish it with a hard char — Traeger can’t really do that on most models. You’re baking at high heat, not searing over fire. Pit Boss can, without you touching a second appliance.
Bottom line: if rock-solid, hands-off temperature consistency is your top priority, Traeger wins this one. If you want the option to sear steaks over real flame without buying a second grill, Pit Boss wins it.
Pick up a leg from a Pit Boss and a leg from a Traeger side by side and you’ll feel the difference immediately — Pit Boss leans into “bigger, hotter, heavier” as an actual design principle, and it shows in the gauge of steel they use. That extra weight helps with heat retention in cold weather, though it also means more grill to move around and maintain.
Traeger’s steel is thinner but well finished, and the newer lineups have clearly been engineered around cleanup. The EZ-Clean Grease & Ash Keg system on the Woodridge and Ironwood series collects both drippings and ash in one removable container — genuinely one of my favorite quality-of-life upgrades in pellet grilling. Pit Boss has closed the gap here too, with pellet hopper cleanout chutes across most current models and dedicated ash management on the higher DX and Pro tiers, but it’s not quite as universal or as tidy as what Traeger builds in standard.
Mistake I see beginners make on both brands: skipping regular ash cleanout. It doesn’t just get messy — it restricts airflow and causes exactly the kind of temperature swings people blame on the grill itself.
Traeger’s WiFIRE app is the more polished experience, full stop. It’s intuitive, the notifications are reliable, and nearly every current-generation grill — from the $700 Westwood all the way to the $3,999 Timberline XL — includes it standard.
Pit Boss has genuinely improved its app and Grill Connect technology over the last couple of years, and current WiFi-enabled models work fine for basic monitoring and temperature control. But it’s not as refined, and app support has historically varied more by model and generation than Traeger’s does. If having a flawless app experience is a dealbreaker for you, that’s a point in Traeger’s favor.
These two go hand in hand, so let’s cover them together instead of treating them as separate decisions.
Pit Boss consistently gives you more cooking space per dollar. A sub-$500 Pit Boss DX or Sportsman model already gets you into the 700–850 square inch range, and the flagship Titan tops out at a genuinely massive 1,600 square inches with a 40-pound hopper — that’s cook-for-a-crowd territory.
Traeger’s entry point (the Westwood, at 653–823 sq in) is smaller and pricier for the space you get, but the brand tends to be more pellet-efficient thanks to its insulation and combustion tuning on the mid-to-premium tiers. On the Ironwood, for example, you’re trading some cooking area for better heat retention and lower pellet burn per hour — worth it if you smoke overnight often and care about fuel costs over time.
Rule of thumb from my own cooks: if you regularly host 10+ people or smoke multiple full packer briskets at once, prioritize square inches — go Pit Boss or size up within Traeger’s Woodridge line. If it’s mostly weeknight cooking for a smaller household, don’t overbuy space you won’t use.
People ask me all the time whether one brand produces “more smoky” food than the other, and the honest answer is: not really, not by design. Both brands cook with real hardwood pellets and convection airflow, and at the same temperature, in the same weather, they’ll produce comparable smoke rings and bark.
Where it gets more interesting is in the smoke-boosting features each brand offers. Pit Boss’s Variable Smoke Technology (VST), found on higher-end models like the Titan, blends PID and cycle-cooking logic to push extra smoke at the push of a button. Traeger’s answer is Super Smoke Mode, standard on the Woodridge Pro and up, and on every Ironwood and Timberline model — it lowers the burn cycle slightly to generate more visible smoke without sacrificing temperature control.
In practice, I’ve found both do a solid job of deepening flavor on a low-and-slow cook. If smoke intensity really matters to you, look for a model with one of these features rather than assuming one brand is inherently smokier than the other — because at the base level, entry-tier grills from both brands produce a milder smoke profile than their flagship counterparts.
This is the unglamorous part of pellet grilling nobody talks about at the store, but it’s the difference between actually using your grill every weekend and it becoming an expensive lawn ornament by August.
Traeger’s EZ-Clean Grease & Ash Keg system, standard on Woodridge and up, is genuinely one of the better cleanup innovations I’ve used. Grease and ash collect in a single removable bucket — pull it, dump it, done. No scraping, no shop vac. Pit Boss has made real strides here too, with pellet hopper cleanout chutes on nearly the entire current lineup and dedicated ash management systems on the DX 1150 and select Pro Series models, but it’s not quite as consistent brand-wide.
My honest advice, regardless of which brand you buy: get in the habit of cleaning ash out every 3–4 cooks and wiping grease off the deflector plate monthly during grilling season. That single habit prevents 90% of the “why is my grill running hot on one side” complaints I see in owner forums.
Traeger’s lineup shifted in 2026 — the aging Pro 575/780 platform has been phased out in favor of the new Woodridge series as the everyday mid-tier workhorse, with the brand-new Westwood and Westwood XL slotting in below that as Traeger’s most affordable connected grills ($700 and $800). Meanwhile, on the Pit Boss side, the classic Pro Series II (850/1150) is still around, but Pit Boss’s own DX Series (700/850/1150) has become the better-value pick within the brand itself, adding a PID controller with WiFi/Bluetooth and a Keep Warm mode at a similar price point.
So the real 2026 matchup looks like this: Pit Boss DX 850 or Pro Series 850/1150 vs. Traeger Westwood or Woodridge.
My take: if you want the lowest price and the ability to sear, go Pit Boss DX 850. If you’re willing to spend a bit more for Traeger’s tech and don’t need to sear over open flame, the Woodridge is genuinely one of the best pellet grills either brand sells right now.
For tailgating, camping, or a small patio, portability changes the calculus completely.
The Traeger Ranger is a tabletop unit with a latching lid and the same precise PID controller Traeger is known for, but it’s compact — around 176 square inches of cooking space and an 8-lb hopper — and it has no legs, so you’re setting it on a table, tailgate, or stand.
The Pit Boss Sportsman/portable lineup trades some of that precision for size and convenience: models run 387–500+ square inches with larger hoppers, and most include fold-out legs, making them better suited to standing on their own at a campsite or tailgate without extra gear.
My take: if you want the smallest possible footprint and don’t mind bringing a table, the Ranger is the more refined cooking experience. If you want a self-standing grill with real cooking capacity for a group, the Pit Boss portable wins on practicality.
If you’re shopping in the premium tier and money is less of an object, this is the matchup that actually matters.
The Pit Boss Titan Competition Series is the biggest, most feature-loaded grill Pit Boss has ever released — 1,600+ square inches of cooking space, a 40-pound hopper with a divider so you can run two pellet flavors at once, a 4.3-inch touchscreen controller, and Variable Smoke Technology for extra flavor on demand. It still has the Flame Broiler for direct searing, so you get true competition-grade versatility in one grill.
The Traeger Ironwood and Ironwood XL sit at the top of Traeger’s non-Timberline lineup, built around downdraft exhaust for even heat distribution, full double-wall insulation, and Super Smoke Mode. You get less raw cooking space (616–924 sq in) than the Titan, but noticeably tighter, more even temperatures — which matters if you’re running long competition-style cooks where consistency across every rack counts.
My take: if capacity and versatility (including searing) are what you’re after at the top end, the Titan is hard to beat for the money. If you want the single most consistent cooking experience Traeger makes short of the Timberline, the Ironwood XL earns its price tag.
Quick reference if you already know your use case:
Pit Boss Pros
Pit Boss Cons
Traeger Pros
Traeger Cons
Pit Boss makes the most sense if you’re:
Traeger makes more sense if you’re:
Is Pit Boss as good as Traeger? It depends what “good” means to you. Traeger generally wins on temperature consistency, app quality, and overall fit and finish. Pit Boss wins on price, cooking space per dollar, and the ability to sear directly over flame. Neither is objectively “better” — they’re built for different priorities.
Why is Traeger more expensive than Pit Boss? Traeger’s pricing reflects tighter temperature control (finer PID increments), more consistent build quality, a more developed app ecosystem, and features like Super Smoke mode and insulated bodies on higher-tier models. You’re paying for refinement, not just raw output.
Does Pit Boss produce more smoke flavor? Both brands produce similar smoke flavor at similar temperatures, since they both run on wood pellets and convection heat. Some Pit Boss models include Variable Smoke Technology for extra smoke output, and Traeger’s Super Smoke mode does something similar on its higher-end grills — so it comes down to the specific model, not the brand as a whole.
Which pellet smoker lasts longer? With proper maintenance — regular ash cleanout, a grill cover, and keeping electronics dry — both brands can last well over a decade. Traeger’s longer warranties (up to 10 years on some Woodridge and Ironwood models) suggest more manufacturer confidence in long-term durability, but a well-maintained Pit Boss will also give you years of reliable cooking.
Can Pit Boss use Traeger pellets? Yes. Both brands’ grills run on standard food-grade hardwood pellets, and you can use either brand’s pellets — or a quality third-party pellet — in either grill.
Is Pit Boss made by Traeger? No. Pit Boss is made by Dansons, a separate company and one of Traeger’s biggest competitors. There’s an interesting historical link — Traeger’s founder later worked with Dansons — but the two are distinct brands.
Which pellet smoker is easier to maintain? Traeger generally has the edge here thanks to its EZ-Clean Grease & Ash Keg system, standard on Woodridge and up. Pit Boss has closed the gap with cleanout chutes and ash management on its DX and Pro tiers, but it’s not quite as consistent across the full lineup.
Here’s how I’d break it down by use case:
If I had to boil this down to one piece of advice standing next to you at the grill: figure out whether you actually need to sear over open flame. If you do, that single feature pushes you toward Pit Boss, full stop. If you don’t — if what you really want is a grill that just quietly does its job every single time without much fussing — Traeger’s consistency and app experience are worth the extra money for a lot of home cooks.
Either way, you’re buying into a good pellet grilling experience. The “wrong” choice here isn’t really wrong — it’s just not the best fit for how you cook.
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