GE Tank (Storage) Water Heaters

GE filters Active: Tank / Storage · 4 categories
Showing 1–2 of 2 GE tank / storage models

GE Tank (Storage) Water Heaters: buyer's guide

GE offers 2 tank / storage water heaters models in the lineup we track. This page is the GE-specific cut of the broader Tank (Storage) Water Heaters water heaters category — same product class, narrowed to the GE catalog only.

About GE

<p>GE's water heaters lineup is one of the most-shopped in the category — and there are concrete reasons it stays that way year after year. This page is the complete index of every GE water heaters model we currently track, with verified specifications, current Amazon pricing, aggregated ratings, and head-to-head comparison links against the strongest competitors in each price tier. Before you start filtering, the next several minutes will give you the context you need to make a confident pick.</p> <h2 id="brand-overview">About GE in water heaters</h2> <p>On warranty length, build quality, a...

For the complete GE lineup across all sub-types and capacities, see the GE Water Heaters hub.

GE Tank (Storage) Water Heaters models we track

  • GE 50-Gallon Electric Water Heater (Legacy) (GE50T06AAH) — GE 50-gallon electric — legacy Rheem-manufactured GE-branded electric tank. Discontinued; replace with current Rheem Performance or AO Smith Signature.
  • GE 50-Gallon Natural Gas Water Heater (Legacy) (GG50T06AVH) — GE 50-gallon atmospheric natural gas — legacy Rheem-manufactured GE-branded gas tank. No longer in current production. Replace with current Rheem Performance eq...

Other Tank / Storage water heaters brands

If you're cross-shopping tank / storage water heaters beyond GE, the following brands also ship in this category:

About Tank (Storage) Water Heaters water heaters

The conventional storage tank water heater remains the volume residential water heater across the US — roughly 75% of all installs. A tank water heater stores 30–80 gallons of preheated water in an insulated steel tank, fired by gas atmospheric burner, gas power-vent, gas direct-vent, or electric resistance elements. Compared to tankless, storage tanks have lower upfront cost, simpler install (no gas-line resizing, no PVC venting), and tolerate higher peak demand events without GPM limits. The trade-off is standby losses (continuous reheating to maintain temperature) and a finite reservoir.