Top 5 Natural Gas Grills — Backyard Comparison
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You are a BBQ product expert writing for Sifty, a comparison shopping platform. Show me the top 5 natural gas grills for residential backyards (must connect directly to a home NG line — no propane conversion kits). Format (follow exactly): 1. Start with a side-by-side visual comparison — product images first, no text above them 2. Comparison table: price, BTU output, primary cooking area (sq in), number of burners, warranty, and one standout feature per grill 3. Below the table, a written analysis of each grill covering build quality, heat distribution, ease of cleaning, and best-fit buyer profile Price range: $500–$3,000. Include at least one option under $800 and one premium option over $2,000. No preamble. No intro paragraph. Visuals at the very top.
Found 233 matching products

Weber E-310 Natural Gas Grill (from $528.00 - 2 sellers) Weber Spirit E-425 4-Burner Natural Gas Grill (from $749.00 - 4 sellers) Napoleon Rogue 425 (R425NSS-2) Natural Gas Grill (from $854.00 - 5 sellers) Weber Genesis S-335 Natural Gas Grill ($1,329.00) Napoleon Prestige PRO 500 Natural Gas Grill (from $2,799.00 - 2 sellers)

Spec Weber E-310 Natural Gas Grill Weber E-310 Natural Gas Grill Weber Spirit E-425 4-Burner Natural Gas Grill Weber Spirit E-425 4-Burner Natural Gas Grill Napoleon Rogue 425 (R425NSS-2) Natural Gas Grill Napoleon Rogue 425 (R425NSS-2) Natural Gas Grill Weber Genesis S-335 Natural Gas Grill Weber Genesis S-335 Natural Gas Grill Napoleon Prestige PRO 500 Natural Gas Grill Napoleon Prestige PRO 500 Natural Gas Grill
Price $528 $749 $854 $1329 $2799
BTU output Not listed in Sifty specs 35,000 BTU (in title) Not listed in Sifty specs Not listed in Sifty specs Not listed in Sifty specs
Primary cooking area (sq in) 424 428 425 Not listed in Sifty specs 500
Number of burners 3 4 3 3 4
Warranty Not listed in Sifty specs Not listed in Sifty specs Not listed in Sifty specs Not listed in Sifty specs Not listed in Sifty specs
Standout feature Simple, proven NG workhorse with very strong review volume Digital controller + digital display thermometer Stainless 304 firebox/body + locking casters Stainless 304 build + side burner (extra versatility) Premium build + rotisserie + sear/IR-style burner feature set

Written analysis (build, heat, cleaning, best-fit buyer)

Weber E-310 Natural Gas Grill (from $528.00 - 2 sellers)

Build quality: Sturdy for the price class (Stainless Steel 430 body/firebox; porcelain-coated cast-iron grates). This is the “buy it once and keep it years” budget NG pick based on its very large review base and durability sentiment.
Heat distribution: Review sentiment strongly favors even cooking; it’s a straightforward 3-burner layout that does consistent mid-to-high heat well, but some owners note it can struggle to reach very high searing temps.
Ease of cleaning: Typical Weber grease management with an analog lid gauge setup—simple, few gimmicks, fewer failure points.
Best-fit buyer profile: You want a reliable, no-drama natural gas grill under $800 for weeknight grilling and you don’t need a side burner or premium stainless everywhere.

Weber Spirit E-425 4-Burner Natural Gas Grill (from $749.00 - 4 sellers)

Build quality: Cast-aluminum firebox with porcelain-coated cast-iron grates; generally viewed as sturdy, with some reports of missing parts/assembly headaches and occasional rust complaints.
Heat distribution: One of the strongest “even heat” grills in this set per customer sentiment; 4 burners also make it easier to create real left/right zones for indirect cooking.
Ease of cleaning: Frequently praised for being easy to clean/maintain; digital display thermometer helps reduce lid-peeking (which helps temps stay stable and reduces flare-up chasing).
Best-fit buyer profile: You want under-$800 pricing but prefer a newer, more “guided” experience (digital temp readout) and 4 burners for better zone control.

Napoleon Rogue 425 (R425NSS-2) Natural Gas Grill (from $854.00 - 5 sellers)

Build quality: Strong materials for the money (Stainless Steel 304 body/firebox) and a solid feel is a common theme; locking casters are a practical upgrade over basic wheels. A few reports of wheels/assembly quirks exist, but overall build sentiment is positive.
Heat distribution: Common praise for quick heat-up and strong temperature holding; some isolated notes of uneven heating or a middle-burner ignition quirk.
Ease of cleaning: Straightforward, conventional gas grill layout; nothing unusually complex, and the smaller footprint can make routine wipe-downs faster.
Best-fit buyer profile: You want a “step-up” NG grill that feels more premium than entry Weber without jumping into $1,300+ territory—especially if you care about stainless durability.

Weber Genesis S-335 Natural Gas Grill ($1,329.00)

Build quality: Premium-tier Weber construction in Stainless Steel 304 (body/firebox + grates) and locking casters; positioned as a long-term backyard centerpiece.
Heat distribution: Owners commonly cite stable, even heat—this is where the Genesis line tends to justify the jump vs. Spirit (more consistent zone control and better overall feel).
Ease of cleaning: Larger cookbox and higher-end grates mean a bit more surface area to maintain, but the design is still “set-and-forget” Weber practical rather than fussy.
Best-fit buyer profile: You grill often (multiple times/week), want a side burner for sauces/sides, and care about long-term materials quality more than hitting the absolute lowest price.

Napoleon Prestige PRO 500 Natural Gas Grill (from $2,799.00 - 2 sellers)

Build quality: Premium Stainless Steel 304 build, heavy (254 lb) and designed to feel like an outdoor kitchen cart grill; overall durability sentiment is strong. Some owners criticize wheel quality and mention occasional alignment/assembly frustrations—worth noting at this price.
Heat distribution: Frequently praised for even cooking and strong performance; a minority report flare-up/adjustability frustrations and unevenness, so it rewards a bit of technique (especially with fatty cooks).
Ease of cleaning: More features and a larger system (including rotisserie/sear burner setup) means more parts/surfaces to keep up with, but it’s still built for serious, repeat use.
Best-fit buyer profile: You want a true premium NG grill over $2,000 for entertaining, rotisserie cooking, and high-heat searing features—and you’re okay paying for fit/finish and capability.

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