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simpson megashot pressure washer
Trevor Raab

The Best Pressure Washers for a Deeper Clean

We blasted away dirt, grime, and mildew to help find the right model for you.

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Spring is great. Outdoor and yard projects kick back into high gear as the weather turns warmer, but so does dirt, mildew, and mold. All this nastiness seems to collect on any outdoor surface from your house's siding and outdoor furnishings to sidewalks and driveways. To keep the fun as you get ready for summer and make short work of dirty surfaces, turn to a pressure washer. They not only clean with the mechanical action of high-pressure water, they also scrub with the chemical action supplied from cleaners in the machines' onboard tanks (some machines siphon cleaner out of a nearby bucket). Bonus: these machines use less water per square foot to clean than spraying with a garden hose.

We tested more than a dozen pressure washers, some powered by gasoline engines and others powered by electric motors. Our goal was to find out which are the kings of clean and, of those we tested, we list only the handful of the top performers below. Read our pressure washer background below, then the reviews, and keep scrolling to look at some recent machines that we haven't tested (yet) but that we will be moving through our test cycle in the weeks ahead.

The Best Pressure Washers of 2024

  • MegaShot MSH3125 Pressure Washer

    Best Overall

    MegaShot MSH3125 Pressure Washer

    $450 at zoro.com
    Read more
  • RY142300 Pressure Washer

    Most Powerful Electric

    RY142300 Pressure Washer

    Read more
  • SPX 3000 Xtream Pressure Washer

    Best Value

    SPX 3000 Xtream Pressure Washer

    Read more
  • Pro GPW2700 Pressure Washer

    Best Electric

    Pro GPW2700 Pressure Washer

    Read more
  • CMEPW2100 Pressure Washer

    Lightweight

    CMEPW2100 Pressure Washer

    Read more

    Gas Engine or Electric Motor

    The pump that provides the high-velocity jet of water out of a pressure washer may be driven by a gas engine or an electric motor. One is not necessarily better than the other, but which you buy will depend on your cleaning needs, budget, and how you feel about maintaining the equipment you own.

    Electric

    These are best suited for brief cleaning sessions, running from 15 to 30 minutes. They have enough power for general washing of outdoor surfaces. They work well on wood and synthetic decks that need only gentle cleaning, all types of outdoor furniture, single-floor ranch houses, all types of exterior siding, and will clean the undercarriage of a pickup truck. They’re not well suited to heavy-duty cleaning or long sessions in the height of the summer. Their motor, cord, and ground-fault circuit interrupter (GFCI) can get extremely hot. These are much quieter than gas-engine pressure washers, and they need hardly any maintenance. As a bonus, they’re easy to store indoors during the winter.

    Gas

    These are best suited to heavy-duty cleaning. The power afforded by a gas engine can drive a large and powerful pump, enabling these machines to shoot water to higher surfaces, clean heavier deposits of mold and dirt, and even slice thick deposits of mud from equipment such as farm machinery, trucks, and off-road vehicles. A gas engine is much louder than an electric motor, plus requires maintenance in the form of oil changes, replacement air filters, and a yearly check or change of the spark plug. Not to mention you have to be careful about fuel degradation. Today’s alcohol-containing gasoline quickly degrades and can damage fuel-system parts like carburetors and gas lines. Also, gas engine pressure washers are best stored over the winter in the garage or an outbuilding.

    Pressure Washer Safety

    All the machines we tested were safe to use, and we encountered nothing in them that caused us any concern. However, pressure washers by their nature demand careful and deliberate handling, both for your sake and that of whatever you’re cleaning.

    Both electric and gas pressure washers can damage surfaces. Of the two, the risk is higher with gas-engine machines owing to the fact that they’re generally more powerful. There are some key things you need to know to clean safely and effectively.

    • Use a green or a white nozzle for most jobs: the broad spray angle is less likely to damage surfaces. Reserve red and yellow nozzles only for the toughest cleaning. Their narrow spray angle provides more cutting action but is more likely to damage a surface.
    • Avoid electrical: Don’t wash outdoor light fixtures, outlet receptacles covers, transformer boxes, doorbells, cameras, or backup generator cabinets. These objects are easily damaged by high pressure water. Also, pressure washing them can, in the worst case, send water inside their electrical box, leading to a corrosion-induced electrical failure.
    • Watch your distance, and keep moving: The longer you keep the pressure washer’s stream focused in one place, and the closer it is to the surface, the more likely you are to cause damage.
    • Avoid or proceed with caution around delicate surfaces such a shade sails, insulated-glass windows, and outdoor furnishings built from soft materials like cedar or redwood.

    How We Test

    Testing pressure washers is the proverbial dirty job. We wash concrete and brick pavements, vinyl and cement board siding, aluminum trim and gutters, faux stone, vertical brick, and wood trim. Vinyl fences and outdoor furniture, too. We even very carefully washed some cars (using the white nozzle). One of the toughest tests was blasting clean three large commercial trash cans with bottoms awash in a nauseating soup of summer stink. They looked and smelled like new cans when we were done with them. Aside from cleaning ability, we look at ease of use. Would the washer tip over if you tugged on its hose? Just how easy is it to get the thing up a set of ramps and into the back of a pickup truck? Was the hose easy to tighten onto the pump fitting? And just how stiff is the hose that takes the water from the pump to the gun? Read on for our evaluations.

    pressure washer guide
    Charlie Layton

    Water enters the pressure washer via a garden hose (a) and moves through a pump, which consists of a series of two or three plungers (b) arranged in a line or a circle. The plungers are powered by an output shaft on the engine or from a motor. Each plunger boosts the water pressure sequentially, one feeding higher pressure water to the plunger next in line. The last pulse of high-pressure water exits the pump. The water moves through a component called the unloader (c). This component unloads water if it gets too hot because the gun’s trigger is off. Next, the water travels down the hose to the gun (d). When you pull the gun’s trigger, you send a series of high-pressure pulses of water out the nozzle.

    “It’s important to understand that the pump produces cleaning and rinsing efficiencies with high-velocity water pulsations,” says Vince Morabit, a mechanical engineer who’s designed and developed outdoor power equipment from pumps to chainsaws since the early 1960s. “Think of it this way: The kinetic energy in that pulse of water is like a chisel being struck repeatedly by a hammer.”

    And since residential pressure washers also dispense cleaner, either out of a built-in tank (e) or by siphoning it out of a bucket, they clean via mechanical and chemical means. You apply the cleaner and then rinse the surface. The cycle is always the same: clean, rinse, repeat.

    “The cleaning agent you use is as important as the pressure washer itself,” says Morabit. By selecting the right one, you rely less on the pressure washer’s force and more on the gentle removal of grime by the chemical action of the cleaner.

    This is an image
    Trevor Raab

    We tested the power washers below on the exterior siding of a house. Electric models work well on wood and synthetic decks that need only gentle cleaning, plus all types of outdoor furniture.


    Best Overall

    MegaShot MSH3125 Pressure Washer

    MegaShot MSH3125 Pressure Washer
    $450 at zoro.com$430 at build.com$15 at mscdirect.com

    If ever there was an aptly named piece of outdoor power equipment, the MegaShot is it. For the money, you get a big Honda engine with massive air cooling fins on its head (it’s one of the best engines in the business, by the way) and an equally hefty pump, complete with anodized hose fittings. And the combined action of that engine and pump produce a lot of dirt-blasting capability. No, this isn’t a commercial power washer—you’d need to spend another $1,000 to get there. But it comes about as close as you’re going to get at this price. We used it to blast clean concrete (including removing masonry stain), dirty vinyl siding and trim, mildewed wood, outdoor furniture that could only be described as grotesque, and equally nasty vinyl fencing. While we were at it, we blasted anything else in the vicinity that looked even remotely dirty.

    Our verdict: This is a productive, no-nonsense pressure washer complete with a pull rod choke and a big red on/off switch. But, hey, pull that choke, yank the recoil starter, and that big Honda roars to life in seconds. Demerits? Its hose appears to be very durable, but boy is that thing stiff. It will likely take a lot of use before it softens up a bit.

    Key Specs

    Engine187 CC
    Weight61.2 lb
    Cleaning power3200 psi
    Max flow2.5 gpm
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    Most Powerful Electric

    RY142300 Pressure Washer

    On Sale
    RY142300 Pressure Washer
    Now 15% Off

    The RY142300 is a journeyman machine, one that delivers consistent soaping and washing performance. It’s stronger than the Karcher K5, the Worx, and Sun Joe and about equal to the Craftsman (the other electric pressure washers nearby). It’s much heavier than the Craftsman, though most of that weight difference is attributable to its physically larger motor. We suspect that the Ryobi is the more durable of the two machines, again owing to that big bruiser of a motor. Our only complaint with this otherwise fine pressure washer is its spray wand mount on the handle. All it takes is one good bump to knock the wand off. It’s very irritating.

    Key Specs

    Motor13 amps
    Weight48.8 lb
    Cleaning power2,300 psi
    Max flow1.2 gpm
    Best Value

    SPX 3000 Xtream Pressure Washer

    SPX 3000 Xtream Pressure Washer
      Light-duty washing doesn’t get much more inexpensive or portable than this compact pressure washer. For your money, you get a foaming soap dispenser and two cleaning brushes–one general and the other designed to clean automotive wheels. You also get a full set of nozzles (four). The machine’s ergonomics are very good; the hose outlets, the on/off switch, and the carrying handle are well shaped and located to make this little machine easy to use. But it tips over easily on grass or other uneven surfaces due its small wheels and vertical configuration. It’s best confined to working on pavement.
      We worked the SPX 3000 very hard (harder than a homeowner probably would) and found its cord and GFCI were quite warm when we were done. There’s only so much these small machines can withstand when you run them relentlessly on a summer day, with temperatures hovering between 80 and 90 degrees.

    Key Specs

    Motor13 amps
    Weight26.2 lb
    Cleaning power1700 psi
    Max flow1.2 gpm
    Best Electric

    Pro GPW2700 Pressure Washer

    Pro GPW2700 Pressure Washer

    The GPW2700 sailed to an easy victory among the electric pressure washers, not surprising given that this is an expensive and well-made piece of equipment. Its high pressure and volume output enable faster and more thorough cleaning. And those come courtesy of the constant-run motor, which is always turning, not just when you pull the spray wand trigger. This improves trigger response and reduces priming, since the pump is held under constant pressure. Also, the machine has a pressure and flow sensor so that the pump output adjusts to suit the nozzle you insert in the spray wand. All of this adds up to better wash performance.

    Although the pressure washer stands for storage or when you need to wheel it for transport, it operates horizontally. Thus, it can’t tip over. And a pivoting hook eases access to wrapping of the 35-foot cord. Our complaint: The hose outlets (both for the spray wand and the garden hose hookup) are close to each other, reducing access to them.

    Key Specs

    Motor14 amps
    Weight47.4 lb
    Cleaning power2,700 psi
    Max flow2.3 gpm
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    cleaning a car with a power washer
    Trevor Raab

    We’ve tested these power washers to clean the undercarriage of a pickup truck and (very carefully) wash some cars. If you do so, be sure to use the white nozzle.

    Lightweight

    CMEPW2100 Pressure Washer

    CMEPW2100 Pressure Washer

    This is a light, easy-to-handle machine with adequate power for mid-duty jobs. We particularly appreciated two features: the large, easy-access detergent tank right on top of the machine, and the whopper of a power cord, 35 feet long. That’s about 10 feet more than on the average electric pressure washer, virtually eliminating the need for an extension cord.

    Of all the nozzles we tried on it, we had the best results with the turbo (rotating blast). It proved particularly adept at cleaning concrete. A final design detail that we really like is its slide-on spray wand mount. The gun can’t be knocked off, like it can with other machines.

    Key Specs

    Motor13 amps
    Weight29.4 lb.
    Cleaning power2,100 psi
    Max flow1.2 gpm

    Non-Tested Options

    hr
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    6565 Gas Engine Pressure Washer

    6565 Gas Engine Pressure Washer

    If you've got a tall house, or tough cleaning jobs ahead of you, consider this entry-level commercial washer from Generac. The company rates it to reach the second floor. Everything about it is outsize, from its tremendous psi and flow rate (4200 psi and 4 gpm, respectively) to its 50-foot steel-reinforced hose.

    Key Specs

    Engine420 CC
    Weight146 lb
    Cleaning power4,200 psi
    Max flow4 gpm

    WG607 13-amp pressure washer

    WG607 13-amp pressure washer

    We're eager to test this product because its predecessor (Worx GG60, discontinued and replaced with this model) did very well, racking up points for light weight, ease of use and a reasonably high effectiveness for such a small machine. We see similar design attributes here, but also more cleaning power with pressure that has been bumped up to 2200 psi (from 2000 psi).

    Key Specs

    Motor13 amp
    Weight47 pounds
    Cleaning power2200 psi
    Max flow1.4 gpm

    RY40PW15 Cordless Pressure Washer Kit

    RY40PW15 Cordless Pressure Washer Kit

    We haven't tested this machine yet, but we're looking forward to it. It's a light-duty 40-volt pressure washer powered by a pair of 6-Ah batteries. It can siphon water out of a pool, lake (or other body of water) or the water can be supplied by a garden hose.

    Key Specs

    Motor40 volts
    Weight33 lb (without batteries)
    Cleaning power1500 psi
    Max flow1.2 gpm
    Headshot of Roy Berendsohn
    Roy Berendsohn
    Senior Home Editor

    Roy Berendsohn has worked for more than 25 years at Popular Mechanics, where he has written on carpentry, masonry, painting, plumbing, electrical, woodworking, blacksmithing, welding, lawn care, chainsaw use, and outdoor power equipment. When he’s not working on his own house, he volunteers with Sovereign Grace Church doing home repair for families in rural, suburban and urban locations throughout central and southern New Jersey.

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