Commercial Fridges
Commercial fridges for cafés, restaurants, bars, supermarkets and takeaway venues across Australia — more than 900 upright storage chillers, glass-door display and drink fridges, underbench and bar units, prep fridges and cake displays that hold stock at a safe, steady temperature through every service. This is the master fridge category within our commercial refrigeration department, and it pairs with our commercial freezers range when you need frozen storage alongside chilled.
Who commercial fridges are for
If your venue stores, preps or sells anything chilled, a commercial-grade fridge is the unit doing the heavy lifting. Restaurant kitchens run solid-door storage fridges that recover quickly after constant door traffic during prep and service; convenience stores and bottle shops front the floor with multi-door drink fridges that sell by eye; pubs and clubs slot bar fridges under the counter within arm's reach of the tap; bakeries and patisseries merchandise through refrigerated cake displays. A domestic fridge can't do any of these jobs — it isn't rated for hundreds of door openings a day, it struggles to hold below 5°C in a 35-degree summer kitchen, and most don't show the precise temperature readout your food-safety program needs.
What's in scope
Upright storage fridges
The back-of-house workhorse: single, two and three solid-door cabinets in stainless or colourbond that hold bulk ingredients at temperature between deliveries. Start with our solid door upright fridges if storage capacity — not display — is the job.
Display and drink fridges
Glass-door uprights and open-deck merchandisers that turn chilled stock into impulse sales — the format convenience stores, cafés and bottle shops rely on. Browse upright display and beverage fridges in one-, two- and three-door configurations from 218 to 1,500 litres.
Underbench and bar fridges
Counter-height units that keep chilled storage inside the workflow — under the espresso machine, beneath the pass, or behind the bar. See the full range of under bench storage fridges, plus dedicated glass-door bar and backbar formats for drinks service.
Prep, cake and specialty fridges
Refrigerated prep tables for pizza, salad and sandwich stations; curved and square-glass cake displays for front of counter; plus wine cabinets, drawer fridges and dry-age cabinets for venues with a specialty program. Each lives in its own sub-collection if you want to drill down.
How to choose a commercial fridge in three steps
With 900-plus units in the range, three questions narrow it down fast.
Step 1 — Storage or display?
Decide what the fridge is for before looking at sizes. Solid-door storage fridges hold temperature better, run cheaper and suit the kitchen side; glass-door display units trade a little efficiency for visibility, which is exactly what you want where customers choose for themselves. Plenty of venues need one of each — buying a display unit for bulk storage is the most common mis-spec in this category.
Step 2 — Size the capacity, then check the path in
Work from your delivery cycle: the cabinet needs to swallow your biggest order with headroom for air circulation, so think in litres and door count rather than external size alone. Then measure the doorways, corridors and the final position — a two-door upright that won't fit through the back entry is an expensive lesson, and every unit needs ventilation clearance per its spec sheet.
Step 3 — Match the climate rating and power
Australian kitchens get hot, so check the unit's climate class covers the ambient temperature where it will actually sit — especially for tropical-zone venues. Most single-door fridges plug into a standard 10-amp outlet, while some larger multi-door cabinets need a 15-amp circuit, so confirm before delivery day. A digital controller with an external readout also makes your daily HACCP temperature checks a 10-second job.
Want the long-form version with capacity tables and brand comparisons? Our commercial fridge buying guide walks the whole decision through step by step.
Popular picks: two proven starting points are the Polar G-Series 218L upright display fridge for compact drink and grab-and-go display, and the AG twin hinged-door bar fridge for under-counter drinks service.
Frequently asked questions
What is a commercial fridge?
A commercial fridge is a refrigeration cabinet rated for business use — it holds food and drink at or below 5°C through long trading hours, frequent door openings and warm kitchen conditions that would defeat a domestic unit. The category spans upright storage and display fridges, underbench and bar units, refrigerated prep tables and chilled food displays.
Is an industrial fridge different from a commercial fridge?
In Australian retail the terms are used interchangeably — an industrial fridge, a commercial refrigerator and a commercial fridge all describe the same business-rated cabinets sold here. True industrial refrigeration (cool rooms, process chillers) is a separate, installed category; for a restaurant, café or store, a commercial upright or underbench unit is what you're after.
What temperature should a commercial fridge be set to?
Keep chilled food at 5°C or below — most operators set the cabinet between 1°C and 4°C so the load stays in the safe zone even during busy periods. Australian food-safety standards expect potentially hazardous food held under temperature control, and a fridge with a digital external display makes the required checks much easier to log.
Can I get a commercial fridge and freezer in one unit?
Yes — dual-temp cabinets put a fridge and freezer compartment in a single footprint, which suits smaller kitchens that can't fit two uprights. If your frozen volume is significant, though, a separate unit from a dedicated freezer range usually gives more usable space per dollar than a combined cabinet.
Which fridges suit a convenience store?
Convenience stores typically run two- or three-glass-door upright drink fridges as the main wall display, with open-deck or countertop display units near the register for grab-and-go lines. Colourbond exteriors keep the cost down, and LED-lit glass doors do the actual selling.
How much does a commercial fridge cost in Australia?
Entry-level bar and underbench units start under $1,000, single glass-door uprights typically run $1,000–$2,000, and large multi-door storage or display cabinets range from roughly $2,000 to $6,000-plus. Energy efficiency is worth weighing alongside the sticker price — a cheaper cabinet that draws more power can cost more over its life.
How long does a commercial fridge last?
A well-maintained unit commonly gives 10 or more years of service. The habits that get you there are simple: keep the condenser coil clean, wipe door seals and check them for splits, leave the ventilation clearance the manual specifies, and give the cabinet a thorough clean-out at least monthly to keep it hygienic and running efficiently.
Can I get a commercial fridge delivered in Melbourne, Sydney or Adelaide?
Yes — Commercial Kitchen Store ships Australia-wide, including Melbourne, Sydney, Adelaide, Brisbane and Perth metro, from our NSW base. Our 5-star-rated Australian team is on 1300 111 901 if you want help matching a unit to your venue before you order.