Commercial Microwaves for Professional Foodservice
Commercial microwaves are designed for faster heating and higher durability than household units. They’re used across Canadian restaurants, cafés, convenience stores, hotels, catering, and institutional kitchens for reheating components, defrosting, finishing sauces, and speeding up service. The right unit improves ticket times, keeps workflow smooth, and delivers repeatable results for staff.
- Quick reheating and defrosting for prep stations and service lines
- Built for frequent cycles with commercial-grade construction
- Programmable controls help standardize results for staff
How to Choose the Right Commercial Microwave
Start with daily usage volume and the size of the containers you heat most often. Then match wattage and cavity size to your workflow. Higher wattage reduces cook times, but you still need enough interior space for your common plates, pans, or containers.
- Wattage (output): ~1,200–2,000W is common for restaurant use; heavy-duty can be 2,000–3,000W
- Duty level: light / medium / heavy based on how often it runs each day
- Cavity size: ensure it fits your plates, 1/2 pans, or common containers
- Controls: programmable menu pads reduce training time and improve consistency
- Build & hygiene: stainless interior/exterior and easy-clean design supports daily sanitation
What Wattage Do Restaurants Use?
Many restaurants run microwaves in the 1,200–2,000 watt range for quick heating without slowing down service. If your microwave is used continuously (high turnover, high volume), stepping up to heavy-duty wattage can improve speed and withstand more cycles.
NSF Certification and Commercial Kitchens
For many operations, NSF certification is a useful signal that equipment is designed for commercial sanitation and cleanability. If you’re outfitting a new kitchen or upgrading for compliance and inspections, NSF-listed options can simplify decision-making.
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Frequently Asked Questions
Many restaurants use commercial microwaves around 1,200–2,000 watts for fast reheating. Higher-volume operations may choose heavy-duty units (often 2,000–3,000 watts) for speed and durability.
Choose based on what you heat most often—plates, bowls, or food pans. Confirm interior dimensions so your most common containers fit comfortably without forcing.
Yes. Programmable pads standardize cook times, reduce training time, and help staff deliver consistent results during busy service.
NSF certification indicates the equipment has been evaluated against sanitation and cleanability standards commonly used in commercial foodservice environments.
