Your membership has expired

The payment for your account couldn't be processed or you've canceled your account with us.

Re-activate

Save products you love, products you own and much more!

Save products icon

Other Membership Benefits:

Savings icon Exclusive Deals for Members Best time to buy icon Best Time to Buy Products Recall tracker icon Recall & Safety Alerts TV screen optimizer icon TV Screen Optimizer and more
    outside the labs

    Best Food Dehydrators

    Our luxury pick costs $400, but our smart buy costs just $65 and won’t take up your entire counter

    When you shop through retailer links on our site, we may earn affiliate commissions. 100% of the fees we collect are used to support our nonprofit mission. Learn more.

    Fruit leather, fruit puree, and berries arranged on a food dehydrator tray
    CR tested three popular food dehydrators and used them to make fruit leather, beef jerky, and dried herbs.
    Photo: Lisa Fogarty/Consumer Reports

    Food dehydrators are an investment up front, but if you want to save money on grocery bills (and who doesn’t?), you may find they are well worth it. Whether you want to reduce food waste, make healthy homemade snacks and dried herbs, or extend the lifespan of foods, a food dehydrator is a valuable tool that can make you feel like a frugal culinary genius.

    In this article Arrow link
    More on Kitchen Products

    A dedicated dehydrator can take that ripe fruit ​​on the counter to make fruit leather that lasts up to one month at room temperature or up to a year frozen. It can churn out a wide variety of spices (ground spices can stay flavorful for one to three years and whole spices can last three to four years), beef or fish jerky (home-dried beef jerky can be stored for one to two months), and healthy snacks like kale chips, yogurt, dog treats, and more.

    Dehydrators are electrical appliances that remove moisture from foods using horizontal or vertical airflow and fans. Horizontal units have an advantage because horizontal airflow reduces flavor mixture, so you can dehydrate different foods without worrying about their taste being affected. Dehydrators come in various sizes and with different features, so there’s one out there to suit everyone’s food needs, kitchen space, and budget. CR tested three popular food dehydrators by Magic Mill, Hamilton Beach, and Excalibur. We put them to work making fruit leather, beef jerky, and three dried herbs: parsley, basil, and garlic. If you’re wondering why you can’t just use your oven, microwave, or the sun to dehydrate foods, stay tuned: We cover that, too. 

    Well-dehydrated fruit leather should be pliable, easy to remove, and not contain soft or sticky patches. If you’re dehydrating beef jerky, you’ll know you’ve done it right when your meat is savory and slightly chewy, but not brittle. Dry herbs are perhaps the easiest to judge: the leaves should crumble in your hands. Here’s what we thought of the three food dehydrators we tested.

    Become a member to read the full article and get access to digital ratings.

    We investigate, research, and test so you can choose with confidence.


    Lisa Fogarty

    Lisa Fogarty is a senior multimedia content creator at Consumer Reports. She studied journalism at Columbia University and has written numerous health, parenting, fitness, and wellness articles for The New York Times, Psychology Today, Vogue, and NPR. Lisa is passionate about mental health and is a co-creator of The Hunger Trap Podcast, which focuses on eating disorders. In her spare time she surfs, plays the guitar, and kickboxes. Follow her on X: @lisacfogarty