Largest George Foreman Grills

Quick Answer: What's the Largest George Foreman Grill You Can Buy Right Now?

The largest George Foreman grill available on Amazon today is the 15-Serving Indoor/Outdoor Electric Grill (GGR50B), with a massive 240-square-inch cooking surface. But that's not the only "big" option worth knowing about — there are 13 large George Foreman grills currently in stock, and picking the right one depends on your household size, your budget, and honestly, what you're planning to cook on it.

Here's the quick breakdown, now with real specs where the manufacturer actually publishes them:

Rank Model Cooking Surface Unit Dimensions Wattage Weight
#1 15-Serving Indoor/Outdoor (GGR50B) 240 sq in, round 22.2"D x 17.9"W x 13"H 1600W 21 lbs
#2 Indoor/Outdoor, ceramic plate (GFO3320GM) 240 sq in, round (same platform as #1) Not published separately 1600W Not published
#3 12-Serving Family-Size Grill ~200 sq in Not published Not published Not published
#4 10-Serving Entertaining Grill ~150 sq in Not published Not published Not published
#5 9-Serving Classic Plate & Panini (GR144) 144 sq in ~18.8"L x 14.8"W x 5.5"H (sibling model) Not published ~8 lbs (est. from sibling)
#6 9-Serving Basic Plate (GR2144P) 133 sq in 18.82"L x 14.8"W x 5.51"H Not published 7.9 lbs
#7 7-in-1 Beyond Grill (MCAFD800D) 6-serving plate 12.5"D x 14.9"W x 11.2"H 1500W ~14-15.5 lbs
#8 Smokeless Digital Grill (GRD6090B) 90 sq in Not published 1500W Not published
#9 6-Serving Removable Plate (GRP99) 100 sq in Not published Not published Not published
#10 Contact Submersible Grill (GRECV075B) 75 sq in Not published Not published Not published
#11 5-Serving Select-a-Temp Grill ~85 sq in Not published Not published Not published
#12 4-Serving Removable Plate (GRP1060B) 60 sq in 12"D x 12"W x 6.5"H Not published Not published
#13 4-Serving Classic Plate (GR340FB) 60 sq in Not consistently published Not published Not published

Now let's get into each one. In order. Biggest first.


#1: George Foreman 15-Serving Indoor/Outdoor Electric Grill — The Biggest One, Period

This is the largest George Foreman grill you can buy. Full stop. At 240 square inches of round grilling surface, nothing else on this list touches it.

And honestly? It earns the top spot for more than just size. The stand pops off, so you can use it on your kitchen counter or drag it outside for a cookout. That's not nothing.

What you're getting:

  • A 240 sq. in. circular plate (the biggest George Foreman makes)
  • Unit measures 22.2"D x 17.9"W x 13"H
  • Runs on 1600 watts — real power for searing a crowd's worth of food
  • Weighs 21 lbs, so it's not something you'll want to move around constantly
  • A removable stand — indoor or outdoor, your call
  • Five temperature settings (not just "on" and "off")
  • The George Tough non-stick coating
  • A drip tray big enough to handle the grease from 15 servings

Price: Usually somewhere between $90 and $130 on Amazon, depending on the color you pick.

The good:

  • Feeds a crowd. We're talking 15+ people without breaking a sweat.
  • Actual temperature control, not a single fixed heat setting
  • Portable enough for tailgates and backyard parties (wheels, cool-touch handles, the works)

The not-so-good:

  • 21 lbs is genuinely heavy for a countertop appliance
  • Needs its own shelf. Don't underestimate that 22-inch depth.
  • A few users mention slightly uneven heat toward the outer edge of the plate. Not a dealbreaker, but worth knowing.

Who should buy this: Big families. People who host. Anyone who's tired of running two smaller grills at once just to feed everyone. Also a solid pick if you camp or tailgate a lot — the removable stand makes outdoor use genuinely easy, not just theoretically possible.


#2: George Foreman Indoor/Outdoor Grill, Ceramic Plate (GFO3320GM) — Same Giant Plate, Different Finish

Quick honesty check here: this isn't a separate rectangular grill. It's the same 240-square-inch round design as #1, just with a ceramic nonstick coating and a gun-metal finish instead of standard silver. George Foreman doesn't currently sell a large rectangular indoor/outdoor model — so if you came looking for rectangular specifically, this and #1 are really the same platform.

Features:

  • 240 sq. in. round grilling surface — identical footprint to #1
  • Ceramic nonstick coating instead of the standard George Tough coating
  • Same 1600W heating system as the GGR50B
  • Removable indoor/outdoor stand
  • Sloped design for fat drainage

Price: Usually $80-$120.

Pros:

  • Ceramic coating is a nice step up if you're avoiding certain nonstick chemicals
  • Same massive capacity as the #1 pick
  • Great for entertaining large groups

Cons:

  • Fixed, non-removable plates — cleanup takes more scrubbing than a removable-plate model
  • Not actually a different shape, despite some listings implying otherwise
  • Manufacturer doesn't publish separate weight or dimension specs for this exact color/coating variant

Best for: Anyone who wants the ceramic-coated version of the #1 grill specifically, or who prefers this color option. If shape variety was the goal, know that you're getting the same round plate either way.


#3: George Foreman 12-Serving Family-Size Grill — The Sweet Spot for Big Families

Here's the thing about the 12-serving tier: it's big enough to feed a large family comfortably, but it skips the outdoor-stand bulk of the top two picks.

What it offers:

  • Roughly 200 sq. in. of cooking surface
  • Digital display and timer on select versions — check the listing
  • Removable, dishwasher-safe plates
  • Floating hinge for thicker cuts

Price: $70-$110, generally.

Pros:

  • Big enough for a full family dinner. Plus leftovers. Nice.
  • Digital timer takes the guesswork out — no more poking at your chicken to check
  • Removable plates make cleanup way less annoying than fixed-plate large grills

Cons:

  • No indoor/outdoor stand conversion
  • Still a big appliance. Counter space matters here.
  • George Foreman doesn't publish a single consistent spec sheet across every SKU sold under "Family-Size," so exact dimensions and weight vary by listing — check the specific one you're buying

Best for: Large households who want serious cooking capacity without needing the outdoor-grill functionality. Also great for batch-cooking chicken for the week.


#4: George Foreman 10-Serving Entertaining Grill — Best for Thick Cuts and Delicate Food

This one's built around a floating hinge, and that changes what it's good at. Thick sandwiches? No problem. Delicate fish that shouldn't sit at an angle? The removable stand flattens out, so you're covered there too.

Key features:

  • ~150 sq. in. plate (970 sq cm, if you're into metric)
  • Floating hinge for thick foods
  • Removable stand — angled OR flat, your choice
  • Chemical-free non-stick coating

Price: $60-$90.

Pros:

  • The floating hinge makes this one of the better options for panini and toasties
  • Flat-cooking mode is genuinely useful for fish and other delicate stuff
  • Good size-to-manageability ratio — not too big, not too small

Cons:

  • Not all parts are dishwasher-safe
  • No digital readout — just numbered heat settings (1 through 5)
  • Wattage and unit dimensions aren't published anywhere I could verify — reach out to George Foreman support if that's a dealbreaker for you

Best for: Anyone cooking fish regularly, or foods that need a flat surface instead of the usual slope.


#5: George Foreman 9-Serving Classic Plate Grill & Panini Press (GR144) — Best for Even Heat

If even heating is your top priority, this is your grill. It uses "Signature Foreman heating elements," which — in plain English — means less hot-spot-cold-spot nonsense across the plate.

Features:

  • 144 sq. in. cooking surface
  • Roughly 18.8"L x 14.8"W x 5.5"H, based on the closely related GR2144P sibling model
  • Estimated around 8 lbs (again, based on the sibling model — GF hasn't published a separate weight for GR144)
  • Signature heating elements for consistent heat, center to edge
  • George Tough non-stick coating
  • Adjustable/floating hinge
  • Works as a panini press too

Price: $50-$75.

Pros:

  • Genuinely one of the more even-heating options on this whole list
  • Doubles as a dedicated panini press — good for toasties and sandwiches
  • Long track record. Strong reviews.

Cons:

  • Plates aren't removable — cleaning takes more work
  • No digital wattage spec published, so if you're calculating circuit load, you'll want to check the unit itself
  • Smaller than the 10- and 12-serving grills above it

Best for: Steak lovers, honestly. When you need a consistent sear across the whole plate — not just in the middle — this delivers.


#6: George Foreman 9-Serving Basic Plate Grill (GR2144P) — Best Value Among Large Grills

Want a big cooking surface without spending a ton? This is your answer.

What you get:

  • 133 sq. in. grilling surface
  • Unit measures 18.82"L x 14.8"W x 5.51"H
  • Weighs 7.9 lbs
  • Sloped plate removes up to 42% of fat
  • Fixed plates, non-stick coating
  • Simple on/off — no dial, no digital anything

Price: $40-$60. The cheapest of the "large" options on this list.

Pros:

  • Big surface for a small price. Hard to argue with that.
  • Under 8 lbs, so it's easy to store vertically in a cabinet
  • Solid fat-draining performance

Cons:

  • No temperature control whatsoever
  • Fixed plates mean more scrubbing
  • Wattage isn't published on the manufacturer listing

Best for: Anyone who wants size without the price tag. Simple, dependable, does the job.


#7: George Foreman 7-in-1 Beyond Grill (MCAFD800D) — Most Versatile Option

This one's not just a grill. It air-fries, bakes, roasts, and grills — all in one unit.

Features:

  • 6-serving grill plate with swappable functions
  • Unit dimensions: 12.5"D x 14.9"W x 11.2"H
  • Runs on 1500 watts
  • Weighs between 14 and 15.5 lbs, depending on the retailer's listed spec
  • Digital panel with real temperature and time control (up to 500°F)
  • Air-fry, bake, roast — plus standard grilling
  • Removable, dishwasher-safe plates

Price: $90-$140. The priciest option relative to plate size on this list.

Pros:

  • Ridiculously versatile — one appliance replaces several
  • Digital precision means consistent results every time
  • Removable plates for easy cleanup

Cons:

  • Most expensive per square inch of cooking surface here
  • Heaviest countertop appliance on this list at 14-15+ lbs
  • Takes some time to learn all the functions

Best for: People who'd rather own one multi-function appliance than three single-purpose ones.


#8: George Foreman Smokeless Digital Grill (GRD6090B) — Best for Apartments

Live somewhere with a sensitive smoke detector? This model was basically built for you. It cuts smoke output by up to 85% compared to a standard contact grill.

Key features:

  • 90 sq. in. cooking surface
  • Runs on 1500 watts (note: a related "Contact Smokeless Ready Grill" variant is listed separately at 1265 watts — check your specific SKU)
  • Real smoke-reduction technology via an open-plate design
  • Digital touch controls with precise time and temperature
  • Dishwasher-safe removable plates

Price: $70-$100.

Pros:

  • Minimal smoke and odor — genuinely apartment-friendly
  • Digital controls give you real precision, from gentle veggies to a hard sear
  • Easy to clean

Cons:

  • Smaller surface than the top-tier entertaining models
  • Unit dimensions and weight aren't published by the manufacturer
  • Costs more than you'd expect for its size

Best for: Apartment and condo dwellers who want serious indoor searing power without setting off every alarm in the building.


#9: George Foreman 6-Serving Removable Plate Grill (GRP99) — Best Overall for Most Families

This is the one that gets recommended over and over, and honestly, it deserves it.

What it offers:

  • 100 sq. in. cooking surface
  • Removable, dishwasher-safe plates (the whole plate — not just the drip tray)
  • 1.5-inch floating hinge for thick burgers or chicken breasts
  • Digital push-button controls for power, time, and temperature
  • Advanced non-stick coating

Price: $40-$65.

Pros:

  • Removable plates make this one of the easiest large grills to actually clean
  • Digital controls add precision most grills this size skip
  • Compact enough for a normal kitchen. Big enough for a family of four to six.

Cons:

  • Manufacturer doesn't publish unit dimensions, weight, or wattage for this model anywhere I could confirm
  • Smaller than the 9-serving-and-up models
  • Not built for parties or big batch cooking

Best for: A family of four to six who wants a good-sized grill without needing to rearrange their kitchen for it.


#10: George Foreman Contact Submersible Grill (GRECV075B) — Easiest to Clean, Hands Down

Here's a fun fact: this one's fully washable. Not just the plates. The whole grill. Worth noting: the actual cooking surface on this model comes in at 75 square inches, based on the model number itself (GRECV075B), a bit smaller than some listings imply.

Features:

  • 75 sq. in. cooking surface
  • Fully submersible design — dishwasher-safe top to bottom
  • Adjustable temperature control
  • Black non-stick plates
  • 30% faster preheat than the older GRP2841R model

Price: $50-$80 depending on retailer.

Pros:

  • Cleanup doesn't get easier than this. Toss the whole thing in the dishwasher.
  • Adjustable heat gives you more control for fish and other delicate proteins
  • Great pick if hygiene is a bigger priority for you than size

Cons:

  • Smallest cooking surface among the "large" tier on this list
  • Unit dimensions, weight, and wattage aren't published
  • Not built for large families or big gatherings

Best for: Anyone who hates scrubbing grill plates by hand.


#11: George Foreman 5-Serving Select-a-Temp Grill — Best for Precision Cooking

This model adds a temperature probe (or dial, depending on the version), which gives you way more control than a standard on/off large grill.

Key features:

  • ~85 sq. in. cooking surface
  • Precision temperature control
  • Non-stick, easy-clean plates
  • Compact but still family-capable

Price: $45-$65.

Pros:

  • More precise heat control than most grills this size
  • Great for chicken, where internal temp actually matters
  • Manageable size for smaller households

Cons:

  • Smallest surface among the "large" tier on this list
  • Dimensions, weight, and wattage aren't published for this specific model
  • Not ideal for entertaining or big groups

Best for: Home cooks who care more about getting chicken and fish just right than about maximum plate size.


#12: George Foreman 4-Serving Removable Plate Grill & Panini Press (GRP1060B) — Best Compact Option

Around 60 square inches, removable plates, and a price that won't make you flinch.

Features:

  • 60 sq. in. cooking surface
  • Unit measures 12"D x 12"W x 6.5"H
  • Removable, dishwasher-safe plates
  • 35% faster preheat than the older removable-plate model
  • Doubles as a panini press

Price: $30-$50.

Pros:

  • Genuinely great value — one of the cheapest options here
  • Compact 12"x12"x6.5" footprint stores easily, even upright
  • Preheats fast, which matters on a busy weeknight

Cons:

  • Best for 2-4 people, not more
  • Wattage isn't published on the manufacturer listing
  • Not built for entertaining

Best for: Couples, small families, or anyone with limited counter space — including RV owners who still want to grill without hauling around something huge.


#13: George Foreman 4-Serving Classic Plate Grill & Panini Press (GR340FB) — Smallest on This List, Still Solid

Last one. Sixty square inches. The original classic design, just scaled down to something manageable.

What it offers:

  • 60 sq. in. cooking surface
  • Classic fixed-plate design
  • George Tough non-stick coating
  • Sloped surface for fat drainage
  • Also works as a panini press
  • Preheats in about 3 minutes

Price: $25-$40. The cheapest one here, by a good margin.

Pros:

  • Most affordable option on this entire list
  • Reliable, proven design — this is the classic George Foreman shape
  • Fast 3-minute preheat

Cons:

  • Fixed plates make deep cleaning more of a chore
  • Dimensions and weight vary across the different retailer listings I checked, and George Foreman doesn't publish one consistent number
  • Only one heat setting. That's it.

Best for: Students, singles, or anyone who wants a backup grill for a camper or RV without spending much.

How to Choose the Largest George Foreman Grill for Your Needs

Picking the right one isn't just "buy the biggest plate you can find." That's a mistake, honestly. The right grill depends on who's eating, what you're cooking, how much space you actually have, and yeah — sometimes even your electrical circuit. Let's break it down.

Think About Who You're Actually Feeding

Not every household needs a 240-square-inch monster. Seriously.

A couple? A small family? You'll probably never fill a 15-serving plate — a 6- or 9-serving model does the job just fine. Save the true giants (#1 and #2, both running that same 240 sq in round plate) for households that actually need them: big families, regular hosts, anyone feeding 8+ people on a normal Tuesday.

Quick gut-check: count your usual dinner headcount, round up a little for leftovers. That's your target serving size. Not 15, unless you're actually cooking for 15.

Think About What You're Cooking

This matters more than people think.

  • Burgers and hot dogs? Any of the 9-serving-and-up models handle these fine — #5 and #6 in particular, since their even-plate design fits multiple patties without wasted space.
  • Fish or anything delicate? You want a removable stand that flattens out (#4). Cooking fish on a permanent slope is asking for trouble.
  • Chicken or steak? Even heat and precision control matter here — look at #5 (Signature heating elements, built specifically for even cooking) or #11 (temperature precision).
  • Panini and toasties? A floating hinge is non-negotiable. Models #4, #5, #9, and #12 all handle this well.
  • Pancakes or griddle-style food? Skip the sloped grills entirely and go multi-function, like the 7-in-1 (#7), which bakes and roasts in addition to grilling.

Buy for what's actually going on your plate, not just for size.

Check the Wattage If You Care About Cooking Speed (or Your Circuit)

Here's something people skip: wattage actually matters, and it varies more than you'd expect across this list.

  • #1 and #2 both run at 1600 watts — the most power on this list, which makes sense given they're searing 15 servings at once.
  • #7 (the 7-in-1) and #8 (the smokeless digital) both run at 1500 watts, giving you fast preheats even though they're smaller than the top two.
  • A lot of the smaller and mid-size models — #3, #4, #5, #6, #9, #10, #11, #12, #13 — simply don't have published wattage. George Foreman isn't consistent about listing this across every SKU, annoyingly.

If you're running your grill off a shared kitchen circuit with a microwave or toaster, the 1600W models are worth a second thought. Not a dealbreaker, but worth knowing before you trip a breaker mid-cookout.

Match the Grill to Your Actual Counter and Storage Space

The biggest grills need somewhere to live. Not just cook — live. As in, stored between uses. Now that we've got real dimensions for a few of these, here's how they actually stack up:

Model Footprint Fits Where
#1 / #2 (15-serving) 22.2"D x 17.9"W x 13"H Big kitchen, dedicated space, or left out permanently
#6 (9-serving basic) 18.82"L x 14.8"W x 5.51"H Medium kitchen, stores flat or vertical
#7 (7-in-1) 12.5"D x 14.9"W x 11.2"H Medium counter, but it's a tall unit — check cabinet clearance
#12 (4-serving) 12"D x 12"W x 6.5"H Tiny kitchens, dorms, RVs

If your model isn't in that table, it's because George Foreman hasn't published exact numbers for it — measure a similar-capacity model in-store if you can, or check the listing photos for a ruler comparison before you buy.

Factor In Weight — Especially If You're Moving It Around

This one's easy to overlook until moving day, or the day you're hauling it out to the patio.

  • #1 weighs 21 lbs. That's genuinely heavy for a countertop appliance, and it's not something you want to lift one-handed.
  • #7 (the 7-in-1) comes in around 14-15.5 lbs — noticeably lighter, but still not "toss it in a cabinet" light.
  • #6 is a comfortable 7.9 lbs, easy to store vertically without much effort.

If you're planning to move the grill often — patio in summer, storage in winter, or hauling it to a friend's place — lean toward the lighter end of this list. If it's living permanently on one counter, weight matters a lot less.

Decide If Even Heating Is a Dealbreaker

Some grills run hot in the middle and cooler toward the edges. Not ideal if you're searing steak or trying to get chicken cooked through evenly.

If this bugs you, #5 is built specifically with "Signature Foreman heating elements" designed to spread heat more evenly across the whole plate — center to edge — instead of just blasting the middle and hoping for the best.

Figure Out Indoor-Only vs. Indoor/Outdoor

Want to grill outside sometimes? Then you need a model with a removable stand — #1, #2, and #4 all do this.

If you're never taking this thing outside, don't pay extra for that feature. A fixed countertop model (#5, #6, or #9) saves you money and storage headaches without losing much cooking capacity.

Set a Real Budget (and Stick to It)

If price is driving the decision, #6 and #13 are your cheapest large-grill options — both still offer a decent cooking surface without any digital extras. Basic, but they work.

Got more room to spend? The 7-in-1 (#7) and the indoor/outdoor convertible models (#1, #2) deliver way more functionality. You're paying for that, though — expect a bigger price tag and, notably, more watts and more weight to match.

Don't Ignore Cleanup

This one gets overlooked constantly, and it shouldn't.

Removable, dishwasher-safe plates (#3, #6, #7, #9, #12) or a fully submersible design (#10) will save you real time and real frustration. Fixed-plate models (#2, #5, #13) are cheaper or simpler, sure — but you'll be scrubbing by hand every single time. Worth thinking about before you buy, not after.