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    10 Best Ranges of 2025, Lab-Tested and Reviewed

    Our testers found the best ranges by boiling water, melting chocolate, and baking thousands of cookies and cakes

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    Profile PGS930YPFS range in kitchen with wooden cabinets and grey stone backsplash with knife block and cutting boards on countertop
    This 30-inch GE Profile electric induction range earns top scores in our tests for quick heating and steady simmering.
    Photo: GE

    A great range should be the centerpiece of a great kitchen. It’ll boil pasta water faster than you can learn to say cacio e pepe. It’ll simmer tomato sauce steadily on the cooktop, and help cakes and cookies emerge from the oven looking and tasting like you’re ready for "The Great British Baking Show." Ranges, more commonly called stoves, vary from budget-friendly electric models to decked-out pro-style versions, which, surprisingly, often don’t perform better than more pedestrian-looking models.

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    More on Ranges

    In fact, the most expensive ranges are not always the best buy, according to our tests. “We often find that price is no indicator of performance,” says Kenneth Sutton, who leads CR’s range testing. “We have some in the mix for $1,000 that perform better than models costing $5,000.” And that applies to those pro-style models, many of which don’t measure up to more modestly priced models in our labs.

    We test ranges from mainstream brands such as Amana, Frigidaire, GE, LG, Maytag, Samsung, and Whirlpool, as well as pro-style manufacturers including KitchenAid, Monogram, Thermador, Viking, and Wolf. The prices range from $500 to around $7,000.

    We’ve highlighted the best 10 ranges we’ve tested in our labs, using a variety of heat sources. If you’re unsure of where to start, our range buying guide will tell you more about the different types of ranges and features. CR members can also access our complete range ratings featuring about 200 models.

    Best Gas Ranges

    Gas ranges provide instant temperature response when you adjust the burner, plus a level of visual feedback that smoothtop electric models and even induction ranges simply can’t match. If you’re curious about gas ranges from pro-style brands like Thermador, Viking, and Wolf, we’ve written a separate article about the best and worst pro-style ranges from our tests.

    Best Electric Ranges

    Electric smoothtop ranges tend to offer faster boiling and better broiling than gas ranges. The stoves here shine in those areas, and they also excel at baking. All three have a warming element on the cooktop. For more picks, check out our roundup of the best electric ranges.

    Best Induction Ranges

    Induction ranges earn high marks for fast heating and steady simmering, not to mention their fast response times when a burner is adjusted up or down. These models deliver on all three fronts.

    Best Pro-Style Range

    Our testers have found that most pro-style ranges, despite their industrial good looks and corresponding high prices, simply don’t perform as well as conventional models. But if you insist on a pro-style range to channel your inner Eric Ripert, there is one pro-style model that earns top-level performance grades comparable with those of the top models in conventional electric and gas categories.

    How CR Tests Ranges

    To test how well a range performs, our experts size up how evenly an oven distributes heat and how quickly the cooktop heats water and maintains a low simmer using a combination of calibrated time and temperature measurements.

    We also test how well the cooktop simmers tomato sauce and chocolate. And over the course of a year, our test engineers bake more than 2,400 cookies and 400 cakes to test ovens for even baking. You can learn more about our tests in our range buying guide.

    Should You Repair or Replace Your Broken Range?

    CR’s interactive tool leverages product costs, depreciation rates, and survey data to help you make the right choice. 

    How CR Picks the Best Ranges

    At any retailer, you’ll find dozens of ranges—if not more—to choose from, some with fancier features than others. But what’s most important is a range’s ability to perform essential tasks really well, day in and day out. That’s why we recommend ranges only if they meet the following criteria.

    • They heat water fast. The best ranges in our tests are quick to bring a large pot of water to a near-boil.
    • They simmer steadily. They have a low-heat burner that’s capable of maintaining a steady temperature when simmering liquids so that you don’t need to stir constantly to avoid scorching, say, tomato sauce or chocolate.
    • They bake and broil evenly. Cakes and cookies emerge uniformly baked from multiple racks. And the broiler heats evenly while still getting hot enough to sear.
    • They offer plenty of space. Many manufacturers inflate oven sizes by including the space where you can’t cook, like the bottom of the oven. We measure and score usable capacity from the lowest rack position.
    • They bake and broil evenly. Cakes and cookies emerge uniformly baked from multiple racks. And the broiler heats evenly while still getting hot enough to sear.
    • They self-clean well. For those ranges with a self-clean feature, we bake a mixture of eggs, tapioca, pie filling, and a few other tough-to-remove foods onto the walls of the oven, then use the self-clean cycle and give each model a good wipe-down to see how effective the self-clean feature is at loosening grime. (Here’s how to clean an oven without a self-clean setting.)
    • They’re reliable. We survey thousands of CR members each year about the reliability of their gas, electric, and pro-style ranges, and we tabulate scores based on those responses.

    Allen St. John

    Allen St. John has been a senior product editor at CR since 2016, focusing on digital privacy, audio devices, printers, and home products. He was a senior editor at Condé Nast and a contributing editor at publications including Road & Track and The Village Voice. A New York Times bestselling author, he's also written for The New York Times Magazine, The Wall Street Journal, and Rolling Stone. He lives in Montclair, N.J., with his wife, their two children, and their dog, Rugby.