Questions? Call us!
+1 (978) 295-7538
Mon-Fri: 9AM - 5PM EST
Free Shipping on Most Orders
Orders over $300 ship free to the continental US. Threshold may vary by brand.
Expert Support
Talk to a specialist — not a call center.
+1 978-295-7538
30-Day Returns
Not the right machine? Return or exchange within 30 days, no hassle.
Authorized Dealer
30 pro brands sold direct. Full manufacturer warranties honored.
Propane Heaters for Garages, Jobsites, and Patios
Instant Heat With No Fuel Storage Hassle
Propane heaters light at the push of a button and reach full output in seconds, with none of the priming or warm-up a liquid-fuel heater needs. They run off the same 20-pound and 100-pound cylinders most crews already keep on hand, and propane stores indefinitely without going stale the way gasoline or kerosene can. The trade-off is fuel logistics on long jobs: a high-BTU forced-air unit will drain a 20-pound tank quickly, so match the cylinder size to the run time.
Forced-Air, Radiant, Cabinet, and Convection
Propane forced-air models throw a heated air stream to warm a whole garage or open bay fast. Radiant tank-top heaters mount on the cylinder itself and aim directional heat where a worker stands, with no electricity required. Cabinet heaters give quiet, portable warmth for a smaller enclosed area, and convection heaters push heat outward in 360 degrees for the middle of a large floor. Every model burns fuel, so ventilation and a carbon-monoxide detector are required indoors; see the CDC carbon monoxide guidance.
Pick the Model for Your Space
Open construction floor or garage: a forced-air unit. Outdoor crew or spot heat with no power: a radiant tank-top. Patio or event space: a standing radiant patio heater. Center of a warehouse: convection. Related: Portable Heaters · Forced Air Heaters · Kerosene Heaters. For a mid-size garage, the MH-0150 propane forced-air heater covers about 3,800 square feet.