Vacuum Sealers
A commercial vacuum sealer removes air from a bag or chamber pouch and heat-seals the bag closed. The sealed bag extends shelf life, locks in marinade, and prepares food for freezer storage or sous-vide cooking. Butchers, charcuterie shops, restaurants, catering operations, meal-prep services, and food-truck commissaries use them to portion proteins, package prepped dishes, and reduce freezer burn. The same equipment is also called a commercial vacuum packaging machine, chamber vacuum sealer, or vacuum pack machine.
The right commercial vacuum sealer depends on three things: external versus chamber, seal bar length, and daily throughput. External sealers pull air through a bag spout and suit lower-volume sealing of dry foods. Chamber sealers seal inside a vacuum chamber, handle wet and liquid foods, and use cheaper smooth pouches. Catalog seal bar lengths run 10.2 to 44 inches with Busch vacuum pumps from 4 to 300 cubic meters per hour. Common configurations, buying guidance, and frequent buyer questions follow below.
Filters
-
Omcan VP-CN-0971 Floor Model Vacuum Packaging Machine, Double seal bar, 1.2 HP, Stainless Steel
Original price $2,653.36 - Original price $2,653.36Original price$2,653.36$2,653.36 - $2,653.36Current price $2,653.36| /FREE SHIPPING
The Omcan VP-CN-0971 is the most compact floor model in the series, with a double seal bar that creates two parallel seals on each bag. The 17.3 by...
View full detailsOriginal price $2,653.36 - Original price $2,653.36Original price$2,653.36$2,653.36 - $2,653.36Current price $2,653.36| / -
Original price $291.01 - Original price $291.01Original price$291.01$291.01 - $291.01Current price $291.01| /
FREE SHIPPING
The Omcan VP-IT-0324 is a residential-grade vacuum packaging machine with a 12.75-inch seal bar, built for home kitchens, small restaurants, and li...
View full detailsOriginal price $291.01 - Original price $291.01Original price$291.01$291.01 - $291.01Current price $291.01| / -
Original price $1,848.50 - Original price $1,848.50Original price$1,848.50$1,848.50 - $1,848.50Current price $1,848.50| /
FREE SHIPPING
The Omcan VP-CN-0749 is a countertop vacuum packaging machine with a 0.5 HP pump that pulls 10 cubic meters of air per hour and completes a full va...
View full detailsOriginal price $1,848.50 - Original price $1,848.50Original price$1,848.50$1,848.50 - $1,848.50Current price $1,848.50| / -
Omcan VP-IT-0330 Residential Vacuum Packaging Machine, 13 In. Seal Bar, Analog Control
Original price $475.76 - Original price $475.76Original price$475.76$475.76 - $475.76Current price $475.76| /FREE SHIPPING
The Omcan VP-IT-0330 is a residential-grade vacuum packaging machine with a 13-inch seal bar and analog control, designed for high-demand home use ...
View full detailsOriginal price $475.76 - Original price $475.76Original price$475.76$475.76 - $475.76Current price $475.76| / -
Omcan VP-CN-5100 15 In. Vacuum Sealer, 12 In. Seal Bar, Dual Pump, Pulse Control
Original price $116.18 - Original price $116.18Original price$116.18$116.18 - $116.18Current price $116.18| /FREE SHIPPING
The Omcan VP-CN-5100 is a countertop vacuum sealer with a 12-inch seal bar and dual pumps that remove air from food storage bags and heat-seal them...
View full detailsOriginal price $116.18 - Original price $116.18Original price$116.18$116.18 - $116.18Current price $116.18| /
Common Types and Configurations
- External (out-of-chamber) vacuum sealer: Bag spout extends out of the machine, the pump pulls air from outside, and the seal bar closes the bag. Catalog units run 10 to 13 inch seal bars with instant seal function on select models. Suited to lower-volume sealing of dry foods, single-portion meat, and freezer prep. Uses textured external sealer bags.
- Chamber vacuum sealer (tabletop): Bag sits inside a vacuum chamber, the chamber evacuates air, and the seal bar closes the bag. Catalog tabletop chambers run 11 to 21 inch seal bars. Handles wet foods, marinade, and liquid soups that an external sealer cannot. Uses smooth, lower-cost chamber pouches.
- Heavy-duty floor chamber vacuum sealer: Floor-standing chamber unit with industrial Busch vacuum pump. Catalog floor units run 1.2 to 1.4 HP with Busch pumps from 40 to 63 cubic meters per hour. Suited to mid- and high-volume butcher shops, meat processors, and prepared-food production lines.
- Double-chamber vacuum sealer: Two side-by-side chambers share one motor and pump. Operator loads one chamber while the other evacuates and seals, doubling effective throughput. Catalog double-chamber units run 24 to 44 inch seal lengths with 63 to 300 cubic meter per hour Busch pumps. Suited to high-volume meat-processing and commissary kitchens.
- Dual-seal-bar chamber sealer: One chamber with two seal bars (left + right) seals two bags per cycle. Doubles output per cycle without the footprint of a double-chamber unit.
- Gas flush / modified atmosphere packaging (MAP) sealer: Injects an inert gas (typically nitrogen or a CO2 blend) into the chamber before sealing. Oxygen is replaced and shelf life extends on color-sensitive products like fresh red meat, fish, cheese, and bakery items. Catalog MAP units include inert gas flush and soft-air on select heavy-duty chamber lines.
- Mobile vacuum sealer: Heavy-duty chamber unit on casters with the seal bar at working height. Lets the operator move the sealer to the work table or production line rather than carrying loaded pouches across the kitchen.
- Vertical chamber vacuum sealer: Chamber opens vertically rather than horizontally, letting the operator seal bags of liquid (soup, stock, marinade) without spilling into the chamber. Select catalog units include touch controls and Wi-Fi connectivity.
- 10-program control: Programmable cycles let the operator save vacuum time, seal time, and gas-flush duration per product. Standard on heavy-duty chamber and dual-chamber units.
What to Look at Before You Buy
- Chamber vs external: Chamber sealers handle wet foods and liquids, use cheaper smooth pouches, and run faster on back-to-back cycles. External sealers cost less upfront, suit dry foods, and use textured external bags that cost more per bag. For any operation sealing marinades, soups, fresh meat, or running sous vide, the chamber format pays back fast in lower bag cost and faster cycle time.
- Seal bar length: Match seal bar length to the longest bag you plan to seal. Catalog units run 10.2 inch (compact tabletop) up to 44 inch (heavy-duty double-chamber). A 12 inch seal bar handles standard portion bags. A 16 to 21 inch seal bar handles whole muscle cuts and large meat primals. A 24 to 44 inch seal bar handles racks, bone-in shoulders, and double-bag stacking.
- Pump capacity: Catalog Busch vacuum pumps run 4 to 300 cubic meters per hour. Tabletop units run 4 to 8 m3/hr. Mid-volume floor units run 20 to 60 m3/hr. Heavy production lines need 100 to 300 m3/hr. Bigger pump means faster evacuation per cycle, which compounds across hundreds of bags per shift.
- Throughput and cycle time: Operations sealing back-to-back hundreds of bags per shift need double-chamber or dual-seal-bar configurations so the operator can load one bag while the machine evacuates the other. Single-chamber units suit operations sealing 50 to 200 bags per shift.
- Gas flush / MAP capability: If the menu includes color-sensitive fresh red meat, fresh fish, sliced cheese, or prepared salads that need extended shelf life, look for an MAP-capable unit. Gas flush replaces oxygen with nitrogen or a CO2 blend before sealing.
- Construction: 304 stainless steel chamber, deep-drawn (one-piece) chamber bowl, and stainless steel seal bars handle daily wash-down and resist corrosion from acidic marinades and brines.
- Voltage and phase: Catalog units run 110 to 120V single-phase (tabletop) or 220V three-phase (heavy-duty floor models). Confirm the electrical service at the install location matches the unit's spec, especially on three-phase floor units.
- Cleaning access: Removable seal bars, accessible chamber bowls, and tool-free pump access matter for daily sanitation. Confirm the seal bar lifts off without tools for end-of-shift cleaning between protein types.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is a commercial vacuum sealer used for?
A commercial vacuum sealer removes air from a bag or chamber pouch and heat-seals the bag closed to extend shelf life and prepare food for storage, freezing, or sous-vide cooking. Butchers and meat processors use them to portion and freeze fresh red meat, ground beef, sausage, and bone-in cuts without freezer burn. Restaurants use them to portion sous-vide proteins, lock in marinade overnight, and stage prepped sauces and stocks. Charcuterie operations use them to age cured meats under controlled vacuum. Catering and meal-prep services use them to package portions for transport and reheat. Food-truck commissaries use them to pre-portion bulk ingredients for fast service.
Chamber vs external vacuum sealer, which one is right for my operation?
Chamber and external vacuum sealers handle different jobs. A chamber sealer seals the bag inside a vacuum chamber, which means it can handle wet and liquid foods like marinades, soups, stocks, and stews that an external sealer cannot pull through a bag spout. Chamber pouches are smooth and cost roughly half what textured external bags cost. Chamber sealers cycle faster on back-to-back sealing because the pump pulls air from the chamber rather than through a long bag spout. The trade-off is upfront cost: a chamber sealer starts higher than an external sealer. For any operation sealing marinades, fresh meat with juices, sous-vide proteins, or running more than 50 bags per shift, the chamber format usually pays back within months in lower bag cost alone. External sealers fit lower-volume operations sealing dry foods (jerky, dry rubs, finished portions) or operations that want a basic freezer-prep machine.
What size commercial vacuum sealer do I need (seal bar length and chamber size)?
Match seal bar length to the longest bag you plan to seal, then size the pump to your daily throughput. Small cafes, single-restaurant kitchens, and small-volume catering operations sealing under 100 bags per day suit a 10 to 13 inch seal bar tabletop chamber unit with a 4 to 8 cubic meter per hour Busch pump. Mid-size butcher shops, multi-restaurant operations, and meal-prep services running 100 to 500 bags per day need a 16 to 21 inch seal bar tabletop or compact floor chamber with a 20 to 40 cubic meter per hour pump. High-volume meat processors, commissary kitchens, and food-truck commissaries running 500 to 2,000 bags per day need a heavy-duty floor chamber or double-chamber unit with a 60 to 100 cubic meter per hour pump and dual seal bars. Industrial meat-processing lines running 2,000 bags or more per day need the largest double-chamber configurations with 100 to 300 cubic meter per hour pumps. Operators often advise buying one size up from the current need so the machine handles growth without becoming a bottleneck.