Yes, infrared grills can cook faster and brown better, but they’re not the right pick for every food, budget, or patio.
“Infrared” isn’t a magic button. It changes how heat reaches your food. That shift can boost searing and speed. It can also scorch sticky sauces or feel too aggressive for gentle cooking if you don’t use zones.
This article explains infrared heat in plain terms, then gives you a quick way to decide if it fits your cooking style.
What “infrared” means on a grill
On a standard gas grill, burners heat the air inside the firebox. That hot air warms the grates and the food. Drippings can hit open flames and flare.
On an infrared grill, burner heat hits an emitter first. The emitter may be ceramic or metal, set above the burners. It glows when hot, then sends radiant heat upward. The grate still heats up, yet radiation does much of the work.
Radiant heat transfers energy fast. It also stays steadier when you lift the lid, since it relies less on trapped hot air.
Dedicated sear burner vs full-infrared main burners
A dedicated infrared sear burner acts like a turbo zone. You use it for steaks, chops, and a fast crust, then finish elsewhere. This setup is forgiving for day-to-day meals because the main grates still behave like a normal gas grill.
Full-infrared main burners push radiant heat across the whole cookbox. You get more searing area and quicker browning on larger batches. You also need stronger zone control, since the “low” side can still feel lively at grate level.
How infrared heat changes food
Radiant heat warms the surface of meat and vegetables quickly. That helps browning and crust. Speed is great for steaks and chops. It can bite you with thin cuts, fish, or sugar-heavy glazes.
Why searing often feels easier
Many infrared grates reach searing temps sooner, so you can build a dark crust without a long preheat. An emitter can also spread heat more evenly than a bare flame line, which helps browning across the whole cut.
Why flare-ups often drop
On many infrared gas grills, drippings land on a hot emitter instead of an open flame. That can cut tall flare-ups. Grease can still ignite if the grill is dirty, so cleaning still matters.
Why gentle cooking can feel harder
Radiant heat is intense near the emitter. Some full-infrared grills run hot at the grate even on low settings. You can still cook gently, but zones and distance become your main controls.
Where infrared grills shine
Infrared earns its fans when you want fast, repeatable browning. It also helps in breezy patios where a standard gas grill loses heat when the lid is open.
Steaks, chops, and smash burgers
Pat meat dry, season, then sear over the hot zone. Move thicker cuts to a cooler zone to finish. For burgers, the calmer flare-up pattern often means less shuffling and fewer burnt edges.
Quick vegetables and sides
Peppers, onions, zucchini, and asparagus can char fast. Use a basket for small pieces, and keep oil light to avoid excess smoke.
Where infrared can disappoint
Infrared is not a free upgrade for every menu.
Fish, glazed chicken, and sweet sauces
Fish can overcook quickly. Sugary sauces can scorch. Cook on a lower zone, oil the grate, and sauce late.
Long cooks with heavy smoke flavor
If you want hours of wood smoke, gas infrared is not the tool. You can add a smoker box, yet charcoal and pellet grills tend to deliver a stronger smoke profile with less fuss.
Are Infrared Grills Better? A clear way to compare
Picking a grill works best when you match heat style to habits. Start with what you cook most, how often you grill, and how much setup time you’ll tolerate.
Food safety still matters. Cook to safe internal temps and avoid cross-contamination. The USDA safe minimum internal temperature chart lists targets for meat, poultry, and leftovers.
| Cooking need | What infrared tends to do | What other grills tend to do |
|---|---|---|
| Fast preheat | Often quick to grate temp | Standard gas: medium; charcoal: slower; pellet: slower |
| High-heat sear | Strong radiant punch | Charcoal: strong; gas: good; pellet: depends on model |
| Gentle cooking | Can run hot; zones help | Gas and pellet: steady; charcoal: steady with skill |
| Flare-up risk | Often lower when clean | Gas: can be higher; charcoal: varies; pellet: low |
| Smoke flavor | Light smoke from drippings; add wood box if desired | Charcoal and pellet: stronger smoke; gas: lighter |
| Cleaning load | Emitter plates need brushing; grease tray matters | Gas: bars and burners; charcoal: ash; pellet: ash and dust |
| Learning curve | Short, yet timing is tighter | Gas: easiest; charcoal: more skill; pellet: easy once set |
| Wind resistance | Often steadier with lid open | Gas varies by build; charcoal varies; pellet often steady with lid closed |
How to cook well on infrared
If you’ve heard “infrared burns food,” it is usually a zone problem, not an infrared problem. These habits keep you in control.
Preheat, then trust the grate
Lid thermometers read air temp, not grate temp. With infrared, the grate can be hotter than the lid gauge hints. A grate-level thermometer helps you repeat results.
Use zones every time
Keep one side hot for searing. Keep the other side lower for finishing. On small grills, run one burner low and leave one off.
Use distance to tame heat
A raised rack, a grill basket, or a foil pan can lift food away from the hottest zone. This helps wings, thick chicken parts, and glazed items.
Stay ahead of grease
Brush emitter plates, empty the drip tray, and scrape the firebox on a schedule that matches how often you grill.
A simple maintenance routine
- After each cook: brush the grates while warm, then empty the grease cup once it cools.
- Weekly if you grill often: lift grates and brush the emitter surface to knock off baked-on drips.
- Monthly: scrape the firebox floor and check burner ports for clogs.
What to check before you buy
Durability comes from materials and parts access, not a label.
- Emitter thickness: thicker metal or quality ceramic holds up better over time.
- Replacement parts: burners and emitters should be easy to source.
- Grease path: a clear slope into a tray beats corners that trap grease.
- Grate material: cast iron holds heat; stainless tends to clean easier.
Safety and smoke control
Bitter smoke usually comes from burning grease. Infrared can cut tall flare-ups, yet it can still burn drippings on hot metal. Clean parts and steady airflow keep flavor clean.
Keep grills away from walls, railings, and overhangs. The NFPA grilling safety tips page lists spacing, supervision, and common fire causes.
| Food type | Infrared-friendly approach | Easy control move |
|---|---|---|
| Thick steaks | Sear then finish | Finish on a low zone, then rest |
| Burgers | Medium-high with lid down | Flip once for crust, then check temp |
| Chicken pieces | Moderate first, hot last | Use a raised rack if skin browns fast |
| Fish fillets | Lower zone or indirect heat | Oil grate, sauce near the end |
| Vegetables | Fast char with steady turning | Basket for small pieces |
| Ribs | Indirect heat, longer cook | Foil pan buffer to soften radiant heat |
| Pizza on a stone | Indirect heat with lid closed | Rotate stone position halfway through |
Final take
Infrared grills can be better for fast searing and steady browning. They can be a rough match for slow, saucy, or delicate cooking if the grill runs too hot. Pick the setup that matches what you cook most, then lean on zones and clean parts for repeatable results.
References & Sources
- USDA Food Safety and Inspection Service (FSIS).“Safe Minimum Internal Temperature Chart.”Lists target internal temperatures for meat, poultry, and leftovers.
- National Fire Protection Association (NFPA).“Grilling Safety.”Lists safe placement and common outdoor grilling fire risks.