Convection Ovens

Commercial convection ovens for Australian cafés, canteens, servos and small bakeries — fan-forced electric ovens that bake, roast and reheat evenly, from compact benchtop units through to full-size tray models. Most of this range sits on a bench and plugs straight into a power point, which is why convection is the first oven many small venues buy. The collection sits within our wider commercial ovens range — if you need steam injection and programmable multi-stage cooking for a full menu, step up to combi steam ovens instead.

Who convection ovens are for

A fan-forced oven earns its bench space anywhere food is baked off rather than cooked from scratch all day. Cafés use them for croissants, toasties, frittatas and roast veg; school canteens and sports clubs bake off frozen pies and sausage rolls in batches through the lunch rush; service stations run them behind the counter to keep hot food cabinets stocked; and small bakeries lean on them for pastry lines that don't justify a deck oven. They're also the classic second oven — caterers and pubs add a benchtop unit when the main range is full every service.

What's in scope

Compact benchtop convection ovens

Small-footprint units around the size of a large microwave — think the Apuro 21-litre or ConvectMAX quarter-tray models. They run off a standard outlet and suit kiosks, food trucks and venues baking small batches of snacks and pastry.

Four-tray digital ovens

The café workhorse class: four-tray units in GN 1/1 or 435x350 tray formats with digital time and temperature control, like the TECNODOM Nerone series. Enough capacity for a steady pastry and bake-off program while still fitting on a standard prep bench.

Half-size and full-size tray ovens

Step-up models such as the Turbofan range take half-size or full-size sheet trays and hold tighter temperature stability for higher-volume baking. These suit venues where the oven runs most of the day, not just at peak.

Steam-assist and stacked models

Some units add press-button steam for crusty bread and pastry finish, and full-size models can be double-stacked on a castor base to double capacity in the same footprint.

How to choose a convection oven in three steps

Three questions sort this category quickly — work through them in order.

Step 1 — Match the tray format to what you bake

Check which trays the oven is built around before comparing anything else. GN 1/1 (530x325mm) suits gastronorm pans for roasting and reheating; 600x400mm bakery trays suit pastry and bread lines; smaller 435x350mm and quarter-size formats fit snack ovens. Then count the trays you need in the oven at once during your peak hour — that sets whether a four-tray unit covers you or you need full-size capacity.

Step 2 — Measure the bench, not just the oven

Confirm bench depth and load rating, door swing, and the ventilation clearance the spec sheet asks for around the cabinet. Benchtop units throw heat — keep them clear of fridges and drink chillers, and allow room to load trays safely at peak.

Step 3 — Sort the power before you order

This is the step that catches people. Many compact units plug into a standard 10-amp outlet; larger four-tray and half-size models often need a 15-amp socket (the one with the bigger earth pin); and full-size or stacked ovens can need a dedicated circuit installed by an electrician. Check the plug type on the spec sheet before you buy — it decides whether the oven works on day one or waits for electrical work. If you'd rather cook on gas with the oven under a cooktop, look at our gas oven ranges instead.

If you're weighing up whether a benchtop unit can carry more of your menu, our guide on getting more out of a bench-top oven in a commercial kitchen walks through scheduling, batching and placement. Fitting out a full bake-off setup? Browse the wider bakery equipment range for mixers, provers and dough gear to match.

Popular picks: two proven starting points are the Turbofan E23D3 half-size digital electric oven for cafés running a serious daily bake-off, and the TECNODOM Nerone four-tray GN 1/1 digital oven where gastronorm pans and reheating are the main game.

Frequently asked questions

What is a commercial convection oven?

A commercial convection oven is a fan-forced oven built for venue use — fans circulate hot air around the cavity so food cooks evenly on every shelf, without rotating trays. Compared with domestic units, commercial models have stronger elements, stainless construction and faster temperature recovery between batches, and most benchtop sizes still plug into a normal power point.

What's the difference between a convection oven and a conventional oven?

A conventional oven heats with static elements, so the shelf position changes the result; a convection oven adds fans that move the hot air, giving even colour across multiple trays at once. The moving air also transfers heat more efficiently, so recipes typically cook a little faster or at a slightly lower set temperature than in a conventional oven.

Will a benchtop convection oven run on a normal power point?

Many compact models do — units in the 21-litre to quarter-tray class commonly use a standard 10-amp plug. Larger four-tray and half-size ovens often need a 15-amp outlet, and full-size or double-stacked models can require hardwiring on a dedicated circuit. Always check the listed plug type on the product page, and budget for an electrician if you're stepping up in size.

What size convection oven does a café need?

For most cafés, a four-tray benchtop unit is the sweet spot — enough capacity to bake off pastry and run lunch items in batches without giving up a metre of bench. Size by your peak hour: count how many trays need to be in the oven at once during the rush, and if the answer keeps exceeding four, move to a half-size or full-size tray model.

Can a convection oven cook frozen pies and pastries?

Yes — baking off frozen pies, sausage rolls and pastry is one of the most common jobs for these ovens in canteens, clubs and service stations. The fan-forced heat browns pastry evenly from frozen without pre-thawing. For holding the baked product hot through trading hours, pair the oven with one of our commercial pie warmers — the oven cooks, the warmer holds at safe serving temperature.

Do you deliver convection ovens across Australia?

Yes. Commercial Kitchen Store ships Australia-wide, with verified product reviews on each listing and a 5-star-rated Google presence behind the store. If you need help matching a tray format or checking the power requirement for your site, call our Australian-based team on 1300 111 901 before you order.

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