The Galanz GLCMKZ09BKR09 is the style pick — a 0.9 cu ft retro-look microwave with a chrome pull handle, rotary dial, and LED display that earns a 4.7-star owner rating largely on its design. It cooks adequately for its size, with seven auto-cook and ten auto-reheat programs, and suits small kitchens, dorms, and anyone who wants their microwave to be a decor piece. It is bought for looks first, performance second.

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Design and Style
The GLCMKZ09BKR09's reason for being is its look. Galanz built it around a retro aesthetic — a chrome-accented pull handle, a bold rotary dial, and a sleek LED display — that turns a normally utilitarian appliance into a piece of kitchen decor. BestViewsReviews reports customers commend it for its small size, ideal for limited counter space, and that the retro look is well-received for its stylish design. It earns a 4.7-star owner rating largely on the strength of that styling.
Available in several vintage colors, it is the microwave for buyers who care how their kitchen looks. The pull-handle door and rotary dial are not just aesthetic — they give the unit a tactile, mechanical feel that contrasts with the membrane panels of the bigger microwaves here. For a styled kitchen, a coffee bar, or a retro-themed space, the Galanz is the clear standout in this roundup on appearance.
Real-World Performance
Behind the styling is a competent but unremarkable 0.9 cu ft, 900W conventional microwave. KitchenCritics notes the 10.5-inch glass turntable rotates 360 degrees for even cooking and is removable for easy cleanup, with quick-start and +30-seconds buttons for convenience. With seven auto-cook and ten auto-reheat programs, it covers everyday tasks — reheating, popcorn, beverages, defrosting — adequately.
What it does not do is compete on cooking quality with the pricier models. As a conventional heater it lacks the inverter even-heating of the Panasonics, and at 900W and 0.9 cu ft it is firmly a light-duty unit. The honest framing is that the Galanz cooks well enough for its intended small-kitchen role; nobody buys it expecting flagship heating, and within its lane it performs respectably.
Capacity and Fit
At 0.9 cu ft with external dimensions around 19 by 15 by 11 inches, the Galanz is genuinely compact and a natural fit for dorms, small apartments, offices, and secondary kitchens. BestViewsReviews notes owners find it big enough to accommodate dinner plates despite the small footprint, which is the key practical question for a compact microwave. The 10.5-inch turntable handles standard plates and bowls.
The compact size that makes it convenient also caps its capability — large casserole dishes and oversized containers will not fit, and batch reheating is out. For its target buyer, who is choosing it precisely because they have limited space, that trade-off is part of the appeal rather than a drawback.
What Reviewers Loved
The 4.7-star owner rating tells the story: buyers love the Galanz for its style and size. BestViewsReviews captures the consensus — the small size is ideal for limited counter space and the retro look is well-received for its stylish design. For shoppers who view a microwave as part of their kitchen's aesthetic rather than a pure appliance, the Galanz delivers something none of the others here do.
Owners also appreciate the practical touches: the removable glass turntable for easy cleaning, the quick-start button, and the auto-cook and auto-reheat presets that simplify common tasks. The combination of distinctive looks and adequate everyday performance at a budget-friendly price is why it remains a popular choice for style-led kitchens.
Where It Falls Short
The honest weaknesses are performance and build. Cooking is merely adequate — conventional heating means less even results than the inverter Panasonics, and the 900W output limits speed. BestViewsReviews also notes the lightweight construction can cause some slight movement when the door is opened or closed, with a rubber mat suggested to stabilize it, a common note on light compact microwaves.
This is fundamentally a style-first appliance. If your priority is even heating, sensor cooking, or large capacity, the Galanz is the wrong tool — the Toshiba and Panasonic models all out-cook it. The retro design commands a small premium over a plain compact like the Black+Decker, so you are partly paying for looks rather than performance.
Who It's Best For
The GLCMKZ09BKR09 is for the style-conscious buyer with a small kitchen, dorm, or coffee bar who wants their microwave to look good and handle light reheating and small dishes. Choose it when aesthetics matter as much as function. If you want even heating, more capacity, or the lowest price for plain utility, the Panasonic models, the Toshiba, or the Black+Decker are better suited to the job.
Strengths
- +Distinctive retro design that doubles as kitchen decor
- +Strong 4.7-star owner ratings for its style and compact size
- +Compact 0.9 cu ft footprint ideal for small kitchens and dorms
- +Tactile rotary dial plus LED display and pull handle
- +Seven auto-cook and ten auto-reheat programs at a budget-friendly price
Watch-outs
- −Lightweight build can move slightly when the door is operated
- −Style-first design; cooking performance is merely adequate
- −0.9 cu ft and 900W limit it to small dishes
- −Conventional heating is less even than inverter rivals
How it compares
The smallest and most design-driven microwave here, sharing the 0.9 cu ft light-duty class with the Black+Decker EM925AB9 — the Galanz trades the Black+Decker's professional-stainless utility for retro styling. Like the Black+Decker, it is a conventional heater without the inverter even-cooking of the Panasonic NN-SN966S and NN-SN686S or the humidity sensor of the Toshiba EM131A5C-BS.
Who this is for
At a glance: Style-conscious buyers with small kitchens or dorms who want a retro statement microwave for light reheating and small dishes.
Why you’d buy the Galanz GLCMKZ09BKR09 Retro Microwave
- Distinctive retro design that doubles as kitchen decor.
- Strong 4.7-star owner ratings for its style and compact size.
- Compact 0.9 cu ft footprint ideal for small kitchens and dorms.
Why you’d skip it
- Lightweight build can move slightly when the door is operated.
- Style-first design; cooking performance is merely adequate.
- 0.9 cu ft and 900W limit it to small dishes.
Rating sources
“A compact 0.9 cu ft retro microwave with a chrome-accented pull handle, bold rotary dial, and sleek LED display, with 7 auto cooking programs and 10 auto reheat programs.”
“Customers commend the microwave for its small size, ideal for limited counter space, and the retro look is well-received for its stylish design.”
“The 10.5-inch glass turntable rotates 360 degrees for even cooking and is removable for easy cleanup, with quick start and +30 seconds buttons for added convenience.”
Our 4.1 score is the average of these published ratings. Ratings marked * were derived from the reviewer’s written analysis or video transcript — the publisher didn’t print an explicit numeric score, so we inferred one from their own words. Click through to verify. More about methodology.



