

🍻 Elevate your homebrew game—tap into triple the flavor, triple the fun!
The Kegco HBK209S-3 is a premium homebrew kegerator designed to dispense up to three ball lock kegs simultaneously. Featuring a corrosion-resistant CO2 tank, dual gauge regulator, and stainless steel draft tower, it ensures optimal freshness and carbonation. Its spacious interior with adjustable shelves doubles as extra refrigeration when not in use. The sleek black cabinet with stainless steel door, drip tray, and locking casters combine style with convenience, while energy-efficient cooling maintains beer at the perfect 35-42°F range. Ideal for homebrewers seeking variety and quality in one stylish unit.













| ASIN | B017II4RPK |
| Best Sellers Rank | #451,001 in Kitchen & Dining ( See Top 100 in Kitchen & Dining ) #32 in Kegerators |
| Customer Reviews | 4.0 4.0 out of 5 stars (79) |
| Date First Available | March 20, 2016 |
| Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
| Item Weight | 96.8 pounds |
| Item model number | HBK209S-3 |
| Manufacturer | Kegco |
| Product Dimensions | 23.69 x 23.69 x 33 inches |
T**S
Great quality
Okay, price may seem steep, but hear me out. As a small business owner this item has already paid for itself. Its super convenient, excellent quality and the CO2 canister it comes with is super cool! 10/10 recommend. Be careful around the edges above the door, dont lift from it b.c its plastic there. It is on wheels, which is awesome for moving it.
J**.
Cheers
I converted two of the taps to accommodate ball kegs for homebrewing. Works well. Keeps the brews nicely chilled.
A**R
Doesn’t fit.
Doesn’t hold 3 commercial 6 stool kegs.
H**N
Decent kegerator with lots of options, but some small gripes.
Overall, I am happy with the Kegerator, even though it is one of the cheaper on the market. Of course you get what you pay for. It holds temperature rather nicely, and the regulator holds the right pressure. The option for mounting the tank inside or out was nice, because I hate the idea of digging out my tank from behind three kegs to get it refilled. I instead mounted a secondary regulator inside, and kept the tank on the outside. This allows me to run a hose off the back for transferring beer between kegs and carbonating other kegs. The taps are merely ok. Basic taps that seal fine, but the action on them requires a touch more maintenance to remain sanitary than some of the more expensive taps out there. That said, among my gripes are the following: 1) If you look at the picture, you see a shiny black strip on the top of the fridge- this looks just like the display on some fridges with digital temperature control. I mistakenly assumed that this had a digital temp control, and was sad to find out that it only has a dial on the back for setting your temp between "1 - 6". The shiny strip on top is vestigial- probably there for fancy models. Notice that 1 - 6 doesn't actually give you a temperature. Since temp control is vital for beer, I spent another $35 on a digital temperature controller. Still cheaper than a lot of kegerators out there, so not bad. 2) Even though I bought the Home Brew version, my kegerator tap tower came with screw on compression fittings on the tap-hoses. I assume these were meant to be screwed on D-type couplers that come with the standard keg version. The unit also came with a bag of ball lock connectors that had barbed hose fittings and tube clamps, so I assumed I needed to cut off the screw on caps, and replace with the ball locks. This was a pain, because the hoses are a bit smaller than the barbs on the ball locks. It took some elbow grease to get them on, even after soaking in hot water. 3) Notice the "Assumed" statements above. The instructions coming with this unit are inadequate. The videos online that I could find were for the D-Clamp standard keg style. I was able to piece together basic assembly from the manual and the videos, but there is still a gasket that came taped to the manual that I have no idea about, and as mentioned above, there is no discussion about hooking up the compression-fitting hoses from the factory to ball locks. As I said above, you get what you pay for- so I am not dinging the fridge for its analog temp control. However, it is bad form to ship a unit that needs conversion and to not include good instructions on said conversion. Having extra parts is pretty troubling as well. That costs them a star. On the up side, this unit is easily upgraded. I've already added a temp control and secondary regulator for the cost of around $180, allowing me to keep my beer at perfect temps and each keg carbonated as I want it, while having an additional hose for C02 transfers. When ready, I will probably replace the tap faucets for another $150. So all told, this will put me at around $1200 for a unit that has everything I want. That is probably a $200 - 300 discount over other 3 tap, digital units that generally only have a single regulator.
R**T
Bring the smooth beer home
It drives me crazy when people review based on what they didn't buy. I bought this as a starter system and am very happy. It comes set up for Home Brew 5 gallon kegs. I bought additional commercial keg couplers and as pictured, am able to fit 3 commercial 5 gallons in with the CO2 tank mounted externally. I did buy nicer than Kegco commercial couplers since this is a common failure point, bought some used tap handles for my favorite flavors, and have been rolling happy since. Some advice: First, like all systems finding the right temperature settings takes days because the more you open the door when stressed the more you hurt yourself. Start midrange and have the patience to know that every setting takes a day to adjust. When you see the purchase price just go ahead and times it by 2 if you don't have commercial taps ang kegs ready to negate the deposits. That is not a negative statement, it is totally reasonable as a functional entry level to draft quality at home.
M**I
Not really set up for homebrew configuration. I have no faucets
Missing parts / draft tower set up for commercial beer. Thankfully I have faucets. Not one of the 3 showed up in my box. These are not exactly cheap. The draft tower set up for commercial kegs is kind of a problem if you don’t already have an assortment of your own Co2 in lines. This seems like it got rushed when packing. Wrong items got sent and the missing faucets (3) would probably annoy most people.
J**2
Beer tap
Love this use all the time
K**S
Great kegerator, good price for triple tap
This is a great kegerator. Note that this is an analog temperature model, not digital. I'm using an external digital control I already owned so I can ferment in it as well. My only negative comment is that it is setup for Sanke kegs and you need to cut the connectors off in order to put the cornelius keg quick connects on, which are included. Why not make a coupler to convert from one to the other and include them in the parts? That way it would work for both types.
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