The CGG-306 is the most grill you can buy near $200. Two independent 10,000 BTU stainless burners feed a 275-square-inch grate with a built-in thermometer, giving real two-zone control and enough room to cook for a small group. OutdoorGearLab named it a Best Buy for cooking performance, noting the stainless construction tricked testers into thinking it cost far more. The legs feel cheap and the footprint is awkward to carry far, but for backyard-quality cooking from a tabletop grill, it punches well above its price.

Full review
Real-World Performance
The CGG-306's two independent 10,000 BTU stainless burners are what set it apart in this price class. OutdoorGearLab scored it 8 of 10 for both output power and control, and explained that the combination of the burner configuration and the accurate, easy-to-use dials gives the cook real two-zone heat, searing over one burner while holding food warm over the other. That dual-burner flexibility is something the single-burner grills in this lineup simply cannot match.
With 20,000 total BTUs feeding a 275-square-inch grate, the CGG-306 preheats quickly and recovers heat fast when the lid opens. Reviewers consistently note that it cooks like a much larger backyard grill, and the built-in lid thermometer lets you actually dial in temperature rather than guessing, a feature most sub-$200 portables omit entirely.
The real-world advantage of two independent burners shows up when you are cooking a mixed meal. You can sear burgers or sausages over one burner running hot while holding cooked food warm or gently finishing chicken and vegetables over the other at a lower setting, all without crowding a single hot zone. That flexibility, paired with the gauge, is what separates the CGG-306 from the single-burner grills in this category and lets a careful cook turn out a varied spread for a small group from one compact unit.
Build Quality and Design
The stainless steel body is the headline. OutdoorGearLab's testers said the high-quality stainless steel design, along with two independent burners, tricked their team into thinking the grill was much more expensive, and Consumer Reports echoed that it screams top-of-the-line performance and lasting construction at a relatively affordable price. The grate, burners, and lid all feel a class above the stamped-steel competition.
Setup is painless: assembly takes roughly 15 minutes with no tools, and the twist-start electronic ignition reliably lights on the first try. Folding legs and a carry handle make the grill tabletop-portable, and the lid closes for transport even without a dedicated latch lock.
Where It Falls Short
The legs are the weak point. OutdoorGearLab praised the cooking hardware but admitted they found themselves questioning the longevity of these legs, and several owners report the folding mechanism feeling flimsy relative to the otherwise solid build. They hold up for tabletop use but inspire less confidence on uneven ground.
Portability is the other caveat. At 22 pounds with a wide footprint, OutdoorGearLab noted the size is awkward enough that you wouldn't want to carry it very far. There is no latching lid lock, so the grill is best moved by car rather than hauled by hand over distance. And the price sits right at the $200 ceiling, occasionally creeping above it depending on retailer.
How It Compares to Alternatives
The CGG-306 is the volume-and-control choice in this group. It offers more than double the grate area of the Char-Broil Grill2Go X200 and far gentler low-end heat, though it cannot match the X200's infrared searing intensity or true one-hand portability. Against the freestanding Coleman RoadTrip 225 it is a tabletop unit with comparable two-burner control but less total cooking room, and it utterly outclasses the tiny single-burner Cuisinart CGG-180 Petit Gourmet on power and capacity.
If the question is which under-$200 grill cooks the most food the most flexibly, this is the answer. It is the closest thing in the category to a real backyard grill that still folds up and rides in a car trunk.
Value at This Price
At roughly $200, the CGG-306 earned OutdoorGearLab's Best Buy designation for cooking performance per dollar precisely because it delivers stainless construction, two real burners, and a 275-square-inch grate at a price where most rivals offer one burner and stamped steel. Order It Dusted's hands-on testing scored it 4.3 of 5 overall and clocked it from cold to 400 degrees in four minutes, and Consumer Reports flagged the same value proposition: top-of-the-line performance at a relatively affordable price.
You are buying capability and cooking surface, not portability or premium hardware finish. For a buyer who occasionally questions the leg durability, the answer is that the cooking system is what justifies the money, and on that front it overdelivers for the category. Order It Dusted noted the main body and the grate are well-constructed and durable, exuding a sturdy feel, which reinforces that the hardware buyers actually cook on is where the money went.
Setup and Portability in Practice
Order It Dusted timed the CGG-306's assembly at about 12 minutes with no tools, and clocked it reaching 400 degrees in four minutes once lit, both of which match the broader reviewer consensus that this grill is quick to get going. The twist-start electronic ignition fires the dual burners on the first try, and the independent control knobs make it genuinely easy to set one zone hot for searing and the other lower for finishing, a level of control most sub-$200 portables cannot offer.
Portability is the CGG-306's relative weakness. At 22 pounds it is not heavy, but the wide footprint that gives it that big 275-square-inch grate also makes it bulky, and OutdoorGearLab cautioned that the size is awkward enough that you would not want to carry it far. There is a carry handle and the legs fold, so it transports fine by car, but it is a grill you set up at a campsite or tailgate spot rather than one you haul on foot to a remote picnic table.
Long-Term Durability and Maintenance
The CGG-306 presents a split durability picture. The cooking hardware, stainless burners, grate, and lid, is genuinely robust; Order It Dusted's hands-on testing found the main body and the grate well-constructed and durable, exuding a sturdy feel, and the stainless surfaces clean up readily and resist corrosion better than the painted steel on cheaper grills. This is the part of the grill that does the work, and it is built to last.
The folding legs are the component that undercuts confidence over the long run. Both OutdoorGearLab and owner reviews single them out as the most likely failure point, especially under repeated setup and teardown on uneven ground. The pragmatic approach is to treat the CGG-306 as a tabletop grill first and a freestanding one only on flat, stable surfaces, which keeps stress off the legs and lets the durable cooking system define the ownership experience.
Who It's Best For
Choose the CGG-306 if you want the most cooking surface and the most temperature flexibility available near $200, you cook for a small group, and you mostly move the grill by car. It excels at backyard-style cooking from a portable footprint: searing steaks over one burner while gently cooking vegetables or chicken over the other. It is also the pick for the buyer who wants a built-in thermometer and real two-zone control rather than a single run-hot burner.
Skip it if portability over distance is your priority or you need a grill that survives years of rough handling on uneven terrain, where the questionable legs become a liability. Hard-sear specialists should look at the Char-Broil Grill2Go X200, ultralight solo grillers are better served by the Cuisinart CGG-180 Petit Gourmet, and shoppers who want the lowest price or charcoal flavor should consider the Weber Go-Anywhere.
Strengths
- +Two independent 10,000 BTU burners create genuine two-zone heat for searing and finishing
- +Large 275 sq in stainless grate cooks for a small group, the biggest cooking area in this lineup
- +Built-in lid thermometer enables precise temperature monitoring most portables omit
- +Twist-start electronic ignition fires on the first try and assembles in about 15 minutes
- +Stainless build feels and performs like a far more expensive grill
Watch-outs
- −Folding legs feel flimsy and reviewers questioned their long-term durability
- −At 22 lbs with a wide footprint, it is awkward to carry any real distance
- −List price hovers near or just above $200 depending on retailer and promotion
- −No latching lid lock for transport
How it compares
Offers more than double the cooking area of the Char-Broil Grill2Go X200 and far better low-end control, but it cannot match the X200's infrared searing or one-hand portability. It is a tabletop unit unlike the freestanding Coleman RoadTrip 225, and it dwarfs the tiny single-burner Cuisinart CGG-180 Petit Gourmet in both power and grate size.
Who this is for
At a glance: Buyers who want backyard-grade two-burner cooking and the largest grate in the under-$200 class for camping, tailgating, or a small patio, and who don't need to carry the grill far.
Why you’d buy the Cuisinart CGG-306 Chef's Style
- Two independent 10,000 BTU burners create genuine two-zone heat for searing and finishing.
- Large 275 sq in stainless grate cooks for a small group, the biggest cooking area in this lineup.
- Built-in lid thermometer enables precise temperature monitoring most portables omit.
Why you’d skip it
- Folding legs feel flimsy and reviewers questioned their long-term durability.
- At 22 lbs with a wide footprint, it is awkward to carry any real distance.
- List price hovers near or just above $200 depending on retailer and promotion.
Rating sources
“the high-quality stainless steel design, along with two independent burners...tricked our testing team into thinking this grill was much more expensive”
“the main body and the grate are well-constructed and durable, exuding a sturdy feel”
“Though this grill screams top-of-the-line performance and lasting construction, the price tag remains relatively more affordable than many other portable grills.”
Our 4.3 score is the average of these published ratings. Ratings marked * were derived from the reviewer’s written analysis or video transcript — the publisher didn’t print an explicit numeric score, so we inferred one from their own words. Click through to verify. More about methodology.



