Quick verdict
For a portable garbage disposal, the deciding factor is rarely raw horsepower. It is whether the unit ships with a power cord and an easy mount collar, since that is what separates a weekend swap from a wiring headache. Among these, the Badger 5 wins on value while the Evolution Compact wins on capability per inch of cabinet space.

InSinkErator Badger 5
The Badger 5 is the unit I install most often, and for good reason. Its half horsepower motor and galvanized grind components chew through everyday kitchen scraps without drama, and the EZ Mount collar is genuinely beginner friendly. It is not the quietest disposal here, but for the balance of price, reliability, and easy swap installation, nothing else in this group matches it.
I spend most of my working life under kitchen sinks, and the question I get asked more than almost any other is some version of "which portable garbage…
I spend most of my working life under kitchen sinks, and the question I get asked more than almost any other is some version of “which portable garbage disposal should I actually buy?” The word portable is a little misleading here, since these are not battery units you carry around. In disposal language it means a compact, easy install unit that a renter or a confident DIYer can swap in over a weekend without rewiring half the house. That is the lens I used for this comparison.
I pulled together five disposers I have either installed in real homes or run on my own test bench, and I put them head to head on the things that matter once the cabinet door closes: grind power, jam recovery, noise at the sink lip, and how forgiving the mounting collar is for someone doing this for the first time. I am not interested in spec sheet bragging rights. I care about whether the unit clears a sink full of vegetable peels without backing up and whether you can sleep through someone running it at night.
What follows is honest, real-world opinion rather than a paid ranking. I note where a cheaper unit genuinely holds its own and where spending a bit more buys you real quiet and real longevity. By the end you should know exactly which of these portable friendly disposals fits your sink, your wiring, and your patience for plumbing.
Our methodology
My testing is deliberately unglamorous. I install each disposal on a standard kitchen sink with a dishwasher branch, then run it through a fixed gauntlet: potato peels, celery stalks, coffee grounds, eggshells, and a few chicken bones for the units that claim to handle them. I time how long the chamber takes to clear, listen for the rattle of incomplete grinding, and measure sound at sink height with a handheld meter so the numbers reflect what you actually hear standing at the counter.
Beyond grinding, I weight installation heavily because portable in this category really means accessible. I judge the mounting collar, whether the unit ships with a power cord or forces you to hardwire, the reset button placement, and how the disposal behaves when I deliberately jam it. I keep notes over weeks of normal use too, since first day impressions hide leaks and bearing noise that only show up later. Scores blend that bench data with long run reliability I have seen across customer homes.
Side by side
| Pick | Best for | Score | |
|---|---|---|---|
| InSinkErator Badger 5 | Best Overall Value | 9 | Check price |
| Waste King L-2600 | Best Budget Pick | 8.4 | Check price |
| Moen GX50C GX Series | Best for Quiet Operation | 8.9 | Check price |
| InSinkErator Evolution Compact | Best for Small Cabinets | 9.2 | Check price |
| Waste King L-3200 | Best for Heavy Daily Use | 8.7 | Check price |
The full reviews

InSinkErator Badger 5
The Badger 5 is the unit I install most often, and for good reason. Its half horsepower motor and galvanized grind components chew through everyday kitchen scraps without drama, and the EZ Mount collar is genuinely beginner friendly. It is not the quietest disposal here, but for the balance of price, reliability, and easy swap installation, nothing else in this group matches it.
In its favor
- Proven EZ Mount collar makes first install simple
- Handles daily food scraps without jamming
- Widely available parts and service
Watch-outs
- Noticeably louder than insulated rivals
- No power cord included in the box

Waste King L-2600
If you want the cheapest sensible entry into this comparison, the L-2600 is it. It ships with a pre installed power cord, which removes the scariest step for renters, and the fast spinning permanent magnet motor clears soft scraps quickly. It is light duty and the mount feels less robust than the InSinkErator, but for a single person kitchen it does the job at a friendly price.
In its favor
- Power cord pre attached out of the box
- High RPM motor clears soft food fast
- Light enough for solo installation
Watch-outs
- Struggles with fibrous or hard waste
- Plastic mounting feels less durable

Moen GX50C GX Series
Moen built the GX50C with sound insulation that you actually notice the first time you run it. The Vortex permanent magnet motor pulls food in efficiently, and the SoundShield wrap drops the rattle to a level you can talk over. It costs more than the budget units, but if your kitchen opens onto a living space, the quiet alone justifies the upgrade.
In its favor
- SoundShield insulation keeps it genuinely quiet
- Strong torque for a half horsepower unit
- Universal Xpress mount fits common collars
Watch-outs
- Heavier, so install needs a second hand
- Costs more than basic disposals

InSinkErator Evolution Compact
When cabinet space is tight, the Evolution Compact is my go to. It packs a three quarter horsepower motor and two grind stages into a short body that fits where full size disposals will not. The MultiGrind stages turn tough scraps into a fine slurry, and the SoundSeal insulation keeps it quiet. It is the most capable unit here for the room it occupies.
In its favor
- Two grind stages handle tough waste
- Short body fits cramped cabinets
- SoundSeal technology runs quietly
Watch-outs
- Premium price versus single stage units
- Hardwire setup, no cord in box

Waste King L-3200
The L-3200 steps up to a stronger continuous feed motor and ships ready to plug in, which makes it a strong choice for a busy household that runs the disposal several times a day. It clears fibrous waste better than the lighter Waste King and barely heats up under repeated loads. The mount is simple, though I would still have a helper for the lift.
In its favor
- Higher capacity motor for frequent use
- Power cord included for easy swap
- Handles fibrous scraps confidently
Watch-outs
- Runs louder than insulated competitors
- Stainless components can show wear over years
What matters most
Motor Power
A half horsepower motor covers most kitchens, but if you grind fibrous or hard waste often, a three quarter horsepower unit clears the chamber faster and jams far less.
Installation Method
For a true portable swap, look for an EZ Mount or Xpress style collar and, ideally, a pre installed power cord so you avoid hardwiring under the sink.
Noise Level
Insulated units like the Moen and the Evolution Compact run noticeably quieter, which matters a lot in an open plan kitchen or a small apartment.
Cabinet Clearance
Measure your under sink space first. A compact body disposal fits tight cabinets where a tall full size unit would crowd the trap and dishwasher line.
Grind Stages
Single stage units handle daily scraps fine, but two stage MultiGrind designs reduce tough waste to a finer slurry that drains more cleanly.
Our take
For a portable garbage disposal, the deciding factor is rarely raw horsepower. It is whether the unit ships with a power cord and an easy mount collar, since that is what separates a weekend swap from a wiring headache. Among these, the Badger 5 wins on value while the Evolution Compact wins on capability per inch of cabinet space.
Frequently asked
In this comparison, portable describes a compact, easy install disposal that a renter or DIYer can mount and remove without major plumbing work, usually thanks to a quick release collar and a power cord. It does not mean a cordless or carry around appliance, since all of these still bolt under the sink and need power and drainage.
When you weigh a portable garbage disposal vs a hardwired model, focus on three things: whether it includes a power cord, how its mounting collar compares, and the motor horsepower. The portable friendly units here trade a little raw power for far easier installation and removal, which suits rentals and first time installers.
The Moen GX50C is the quietest in this group thanks to its SoundShield wrap, with the InSinkErator Evolution Compact close behind. If you compare a portable garbage disposal vs a basic uninsulated one, the insulated models are dramatically easier to live with in an open kitchen.
Yes, most people can. Units with an EZ Mount collar and an included power cord, like the Waste King models, are the simplest. If you are matching an existing sink flange, any of these mount to the standard collar, though a quick stage two grind unit is heavier and benefits from a second pair of hands during the lift.
Update log
- Jun 12, 2026 — Refreshed picks and rankings.
- Apr 6, 2026 — Initial guide published.







