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    Best Early Black Friday Deals on Ranges

    Models from Samsung, LG, and Frigidaire are already on sale for the holidays

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    A person cooking on a stove while wearing a pink apron.
    Your range is the centerpiece of your kitchen. Regardless of the style you prefer, you’ll find plenty of options to consider.
    Illustration: Abbey Lossing

    The range is the workhorse of your kitchen, and you can score serious savings when you plan to buy on Black Friday. This year, we’re already seeing some great discounts on everything from entry-level gas and electric offerings to feature-packed induction models, from retailers like AJ Madison, Best Buy, Home Depot, and Lowe’s.

    Many of these prices align with what we’ve seen all year on long holiday weekends, which makes sense given that Veterans Day is next weekend. There’s a chance that the discounts could get even better closer to Black Friday, so you may want to use this time to research your options and consider waiting until the end of the month to make a purchase. But if you need to replace a broken appliance now, these discounts are definitely worth it. Since most of the big retailers offer price match policies, you’ll notice that prices are similar—or even identical—from one retailer to the next. If they’re not, you can typically call the retailer or visit in person and get them to match the lowest advertised price from any competitor. 

    Not sure which range fits your cooking style? Check CR’s range buying guide and range ratings of gas, electric, and induction models to view how each differs from one another and how models across types performed in our tests. If you’re just looking for the top scorers, see our roundup of the best ranges of 2025.

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    Single-Oven Gas Ranges

    The top-of-the-line LG LSDL6336F delivers stellar performance all around, making it one of our top picks for a single-oven gas range. Technically it’s a dual-fuel model, which means it has a gas cooktop and an electric oven, which probably explains why the oven outperforms many others in this product category. The cooktop excels, heating water in a flash, and deftly maintaining a steady simmer. The oven bakes and broils evenly. This range is packed with features, including an integrated griddle burner, convection, an air-fry setting in the oven, and even a built-in temperature probe for cooking roasts and poultry to the perfect internal temperature.

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    This single-oven gas slide-in LG is among the best gas ranges we’ve seen. It heats fast, simmers consistently, and bakes well, too, though broiling lags a bit behind. It has convection, continuous grates (for easily sliding pots and pans between burners), a griddle burner, and front-mounted controls with no back panel. It’s available in stainless steel or black stainless.

    The sleek, slide-in GE Profile PGS930YPFS offers performance on a par with other top competitors. More important, GE gas ranges are among the most reliable of any brand in our member surveys. In addition, this model performs admirably on top of the stove—heating fast and maintaining steady simmers—and in the oven, earning solid scores for both baking and broiling. This range comes with features like an integrated griddle burner, convection, and WiFi connectivity. To get the Lowe’s deal, you’ll need to add the range to your cart for the sale price to display.

    Double-Oven Gas Ranges

    The LG Signature LUTD4919SN has a gas cooktop and electric ovens, both with convection. In fact, it’s one of the highest-scoring dual-fuel ranges with two ovens in our ratings. Built to compete with pricier pro-style models, it features a stove with continuous grates, five burners, and extras, such as a wok ring that fits over the largest burner. The performance is exceptional, with steady simmering, fast heating, and even baking and broiling.

    The GE JGBS86SPSS is the least expensive model of the double-oven gas ranges recommended by CR, and it’s still available for the same price we saw during Prime Day. But it doesn’t skimp on features. It’s equipped with continuous cast-iron grates, two high-power burners, and convection and air-frying modes. The ovens perform solidly in our baking and broiling tests, and the cooktop simmers very steadily, but its boiling speed is on the slower side of all the gas ranges we’ve tested. Based on our CR member surveys, GE gas ranges are top-notch for reliability and so-so for owner satisfaction.

    The LG LTGL6937F was $200 less last year, and the full price was listed as $3,200 last year too, so the "savings" you’re seeing now have definitely been inflated a bit this year. This could be due to inflation or rising costs for the manufacturer. It features a gas cooktop and two gas ovens, both equipped with convection capabilities. It’s among the best double-oven gas ranges in our ratings, and it comes with continuous grates, a griddle burner, and WiFi connectivity that lets you control the oven temperature from your smartphone. Broiling is just middling. Otherwise, it heats fast, simmers steadily, and bakes evenly, too.

    The top-rated GE Profile PGB965YPFS is packed with features like convection and air-fry, plus continuous grates, a griddle, two high-powered burners, and WiFi connectivity. It’s also a stellar performer, holding steady simmers and baking beautifully, all while offering exceptional reliability. Broiling is just so-so, and the self-clean cycle isn’t as effective as it could be, so you’ll still need to do some scrubbing. If you want the sleek look of a slide-in, consider the GE Profile PGS960YPFS with front-mounted controls, which we haven’t tested but expect to perform almost identically to this model.

    Single-Oven Electric Smoothtop Ranges

    The LG LREL6321S single oven is an exceptionally strong performer at a great price, though it was $100 less for Black Friday last year. It’s far less expensive than the spiffier LG below, but it still heats fast and simmers steadily on top of the stove, earning an excellent performance rating in our cooktop high and low tests. It also bakes and broils evenly. There’s no convection mode, but you’ll find a warming element, along with two high-powered burners on the cooktop. LG earns high reliability ratings for its electric ovens based on our member surveys.

    The GE Profile PSS93YPFS is a slide-in with all-digital controls, offering killer performance for baking and cooking on low heat. It also comes with a slew of features, including convection and air-fry modes in the oven. GE lands a top-notch predicted reliability rating but a mediocre owner satisfaction score for its electric ranges, based on data from CR’s member surveys.

    Double-Oven Electric Ranges

    The Samsung NE63A6751SS lands just behind the other double-oven ranges we’ve tested in overall performance but still has plenty to offer—and it’s reasonably priced, too. It hasn’t sold for less than this since Memorial Day, when it was around $1,000, so there’s a small chance it could drop down again for Black Friday. This range scores admirably in just about every test, notably earning top ratings for low heat, baking, and oven capacity. Among other handy features, there’s a convertible oven that can be partitioned to work as either a single-or double-oven model, a convection mode in both ovens, and an air-fry setting.

    Induction Ranges

    The 30-inch LG Studio LSIS6338FE is a high-end model that we expect to perform like the LG LSE4616ST. That model, which we tested before it was discontinued, was the single-best induction range in our lab and, in fact, the best range, period. This Studio model should offer the very same performance. Like most induction ranges, it heats quickly and simmers steadily, earning top scores in our high- and low-heat tests. It’s also top-notch at baking, broiling, and self-cleaning. It has a glass touchscreen for setting the oven temperature, along with a convection oven mode and two high-powered elements. The oven can be wirelessly controlled from a smartphone. As a brand, LG earns top marks for predicted reliability and owner satisfaction for its induction ranges.

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    Paul Hope

    Paul Hope is a Home & DIY Editor at Consumer Reports and a trained chef. He covers ranges, cooktops, and wall ovens, as well as grills, drills, outdoor power tools, decking, and wood stains. Before joining CR in 2016, he tested kitchen products at Good Housekeeping and covered tools and remodeling for This Old House magazine. You’ll typically find him in his old fixer-upper, engrossed in a DIY project or trying out a new recipe.