This is one of the most common questions from business owners investing in cold storage for the first time. While both are types of cold rooms, they serve fundamentally different purposes and have significant differences in design, cost, and running expenses.
Temperature: The Core Difference
| Feature | Chiller Room | Freezer Room |
|---|---|---|
| Operating temperature | 0°C to 8°C | -18°C to -25°C |
| Product state | Fresh/refrigerated | Frozen |
| Typical use | Dairy, produce, drinks, pharma | Meat, fish, ice cream, frozen meals |
| Panel thickness | 80–100mm | 100–150mm |
| Refrigeration power | Lower | Higher |
| Electricity consumption | Lower | Higher |
| Installation cost | Lower | Higher |
Insulation Requirements
Freezer rooms must maintain temperatures up to 40°C colder than a chiller room. This means they require significantly thicker insulation panels — typically 150mm versus 80–100mm for a chiller. Freezer room floors also require insulation to prevent the extreme cold from penetrating the ground and causing frost heave, which can crack concrete slabs over time.
Refrigeration Equipment
A freezer room requires a more powerful compressor and refrigeration system than a chiller room of the same size. The refrigerant type may also differ — some refrigerants are better suited to deep cold applications. Equipment costs for a freezer room are typically 40–60% higher than an equivalent chiller room.
Humidity Considerations
Chiller rooms generally maintain higher relative humidity, which is beneficial for fresh produce that would otherwise dehydrate. Freezer rooms operate in very dry conditions because moisture freezes out of the air onto the evaporator coils. This is why proper product packaging is essential in freezer storage.
Defrost Systems
Freezer rooms must have a defrost cycle built into the refrigeration controls. Ice builds up on the evaporator coils during normal operation, and without regular defrosting, airflow is blocked and efficiency drops sharply. Chiller rooms may not require active defrost if they operate above 0°C.
Entry and Exit
Freezer rooms use heavier, more heavily insulated doors with electric or manual heater strips around the door frame to prevent the seal from freezing shut — a serious safety risk. Chiller room doors are lighter and simpler.
Can One Room Do Both?
Not effectively. Some businesses install a combined chiller-freezer unit with a partition, but each compartment must have its own independent refrigeration system. There is no single refrigeration unit that can maintain both +4°C and -20°C in the same space.
Choose a chiller room for products that need to stay fresh and cool. Choose a freezer room for products that must be solidly frozen. If you need both, plan for two separate rooms from the start — the operational and food safety benefits far outweigh the additional cost.