The EGO POWER+ 3200 PSI meets
the Ryobi 18V ONE+ HP EZClean
The closest a battery gets to replacing gas. We tested it head-to-head against the Ryobi 18V ONE+ HP EZClean ($119) across 6 key dimensions.
Head-to-Head Breakdown
Strengths & Weaknesses
EGO POWER+ 3200 PSI
- Highest tested output of any cordless unit: 2,239 PSI at 1.35 GPM with factory tip (Tools Tested)
- Best foam/soap performance among battery pressure washers (Tools Tested)
- Integrated wand display with speed-control button for on-the-fly pressure adjustment
- 25ft flexible high-pressure hose with pre-installed quick connects
- Requires two 56V batteries for full turbo mode; single battery locks you to speed 2
- Proprietary wand quick-connect requires adapter for standard nozzle tips
- 36+ lbs makes it the heaviest cordless option by far
- Still falls short of gas units at 2,684 PSI / 2.3 GPM (Tools Tested)
Ryobi 18V ONE+ HP EZClean
- 4.2 lbs and truly handheld; pulls water from a bucket, garden hose, or 2-liter bottle (Jumper man Tech)
- Speed 3 setting is 'crazy strong' for wheels, salt removal, and HVAC coils (Jumper man Tech)
- $119 tool-only works with Ryobi ONE+ batteries millions already own
- Brushless motor with aluminum quick-connects at a budget price point (Tools Tested)
- Weakest raw output in the lineup: 425 PSI / 1.0 GPM in standardized testing (Tools Tested)
- Loudest cordless unit tested at 83.3 dB (Tools Tested)
- No 40-degree tip included; had to borrow one from a Craftsman for standard tests (Tools Tested)
- Poor soap/foam performance from the included detergent bottle (Tools Tested)
The Verdict
Our Bottom Line
Tools Tested built a standardized test rig with inlet and outlet flow meters plus a pressure gauge, then ran every cordless unit through identical conditions. The EGO Dual-Battery 3200 PSI crushed everything. With a standard 40-degree tip, it pushed 970 PSI at 1.6 GPM. Switch to the factory-provided turbo nozzle and it jumped to 2,239 PSI at 1.35 GPM. No other cordless unit came close.
EGO POWER+ 3200 PSI
Tools Tested built a standardized test rig with inlet and outlet flow meters plus a pressure gauge, then ran every cordless unit through identical conditions. The EGO Dual-Battery 3200 PSI crushed everything. With a standard 40-degree tip, it pushed 970 PSI at 1.6 GPM. Switch to the factory-provided turbo nozzle and it jumped to 2,239 PSI at 1.35 GPM. No other cordless unit came close.
- Homeowners with driveways, decks, and siding who currently use a gas pressure washer and want to go cordless
- EGO 56V battery owners who can immediately run turbo mode with two existing batteries
- Car detailers who need actual foam cannon performance from a cordless setup
- Anyone who values cleaning results over portability and doesn't mind a 50-lb wheeled cart
- Buyers willing to invest $800+ in a tool-plus-battery kit that approaches gas-level performance
Ryobi 18V ONE+ HP EZClean
The Ryobi 18V ONE+ HP EZClean costs $119 for the bare tool, works with batteries millions of people already own, and weighs 4.2 pounds. Jumper man Tech praised it specifically because it doesn't need a water line at all. Clip on the included siphon hose and it pulls from a bucket. Screw on the 2-liter bottle adapter and you can clean HVAC condenser coils on a roof, salt off car wheels in a parking garage, or rinse camping gear miles from the nearest spigot.
- Apartment or condo dwellers without a dedicated water hookup
- Ryobi ONE+ owners who want a pressure cleaner for $119 with zero additional investment
- Car owners who need a quick rinse tool for wheels, undercarriage, and salt removal
- Anyone who needs to clean in locations without running water (rooftops, garages, campsites)
- Budget-conscious buyers who want cordless convenience for light-duty tasks under 600 PSI