Heating Lamps
Commercial heat lamps are overhead and bench-mounted warmers that hold cooked food at safe serving temperature for cafes, pubs, RSLs, bistros and caterers across Australia. Whether you call them heat lamps or heating lamps, the job is the same: keep plated meals, fried foods and carvery hot on the pass without drying them out before they reach the customer. This collection covers strip and gantry lamps for the kitchen pass, freestanding bench food-warmer lamps for self-serve, and replacement quartz assemblies — sitting alongside our hot food displays and bain maries for a complete hot-holding line-up.
Who commercial heat lamps are for
If your venue plates food ahead of service or runs a busy pass, a food heat lamp earns its keep fast. Cafes and bistros use overhead strip lamps to hold mains while the rest of the table is finished. Pubs and RSLs lean on bench food-warmer lamps for carvery, schnitzel and chips on a self-serve bar. Takeaways, food trucks and bakeries use compact single-lamp units to keep pies, rolls and fried sides hot and crisp. The common thread: you've already cooked the food well, and a heating lamp protects that work in the minutes between kitchen and customer.
What's in this collection
Commercial kitchen heat lamps generally fall into a few clear sub-types, and knowing which one suits your service makes the choice simple.
Strip and gantry heat lamps
Overhead lamps mounted on a gantry or bar above the pass. They cover a run of plates at once and free up bench space, so they suit restaurants and bistros with a defined plating line.
Freestanding bench food-warmer lamps
Self-contained units that sit on a counter, often with multiple lamps over a heated base. Ideal for carvery, buffets and self-serve bars in pubs and function venues where food sits out for diners to collect.
Quartz heat-lamp assemblies and bulb lamps
Quartz assemblies use a fast-heating element for sharp, even radiant warmth and are popular as replacement or modular components. Bulb-style lamps use an infrared globe and are the simplest, lowest-cost option for a single hot spot.
How to choose a heating lamp: 3 questions
Work through these three questions in order and you'll land on the right food lamp heater for your venue.
Step 1 — Where will it sit?
Decide between overhead and bench-top. If you have a fixed pass and want clear bench space, a gantry-mounted strip lamp is the answer. If food is served from a counter or buffet that customers approach, a freestanding bench food warmer with built-in lamps is the better fit.
Step 2 — How much food, how often?
Match the heated length or lamp count to your covers. A single-lamp unit handles a quiet takeaway; a multi-lamp gantry or a six-lamp bench warmer holds the volume of a busy pub carvery or back-to-back service without leaving plates at the cold end.
Step 3 — Quartz or bulb?
Choose quartz for faster, more even heat across a pass and easy element replacement down the track. Choose a bulb lamp when you only need to warm one spot and want the simplest, most affordable setup. Check the power supply and mounting at the same time so installation is a non-event.
Matching the lamp to your venue
A cafe pushing 80 covers a day rarely needs the same kit as a 300-seat pub. Smaller venues and food trucks do well with one or two lamps over the key hot spot; high-volume kitchens, RSLs and caterers benefit from a full gantry or a bench warmer that can hold a spread. For longer holds — think function platters or a carvery that runs for an hour — pair your lamps with hot holding cabinets so food stays at temperature in bulk and the lamps handle the final pass.
Popular models include the Roband 900mm quartz heat-lamp assembly for covering a wide pass with even radiant heat, and the Benchstar 6-lamp food warmer for self-serve carvery and buffet duty. For the full range from one trusted brand, browse our Roband heat lamps.
Frequently asked questions
What is a commercial heat lamp used for?
A commercial heat lamp keeps cooked food at a safe, appealing serving temperature between the kitchen and the customer. It uses radiant heat from a quartz element or infrared globe to hold plated meals, fried foods and carvery warm on the pass without continuing to cook them.
What's the difference between a heat lamp and a heating lamp?
There's no real difference — "heat lamp" and "heating lamp" are two names for the same equipment. Both refer to overhead or bench warmers that use radiant heat to hold food at temperature in a commercial kitchen.
Are heat lamps good for keeping food warm?
Yes. Heat lamps are designed specifically to keep food warm for short holds on the pass or a self-serve counter. They work best for food that's already cooked and plated; for long bulk holds, a holding cabinet or bain marie maintains temperature more efficiently.
What type of heat lamp do I need for a commercial kitchen?
It depends on where and how you serve. Choose an overhead strip or gantry lamp for a fixed kitchen pass, a freestanding bench food-warmer lamp for self-serve carvery and buffets, and a quartz assembly or bulb lamp for a single hot spot or as a modular replacement.
How many lamps do I need over my pass?
Match lamp count to your service volume and the length of the pass you need to cover. One or two lamps suit a small cafe or food truck, while a busy pub or restaurant pass is better served by a multi-lamp gantry or a six-lamp bench warmer that holds back-to-back orders.
Do food heat lamps dry out the food?
Quality commercial heat lamps hold food gently with radiant warmth rather than baking it, so well-managed holds stay moist. To minimise drying, keep holds short, cover saucy items where practical, and avoid running the lamp hotter than needed for the food underneath.
Is a heat lamp or a bain marie better?
They suit different jobs. A heat lamp keeps plated, dry and fried foods hot from above on the pass; a bain marie holds wet foods like sauces, soups and vegetables at temperature from below. Many kitchens run both, using lamps for plating and bain maries for bulk wet holding.
Does CKS deliver heat lamps across Australia?
Yes. Commercial Kitchen Store ships heat lamps and food warmers nationwide, with Australian-based phone support on 1300 111 901 for help choosing the right unit for your venue.