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Bosch 800 Series French Door Refrigerator vs Bosch Counter-Depth Refrigerator (800 Series)

Honest head-to-head from real owner consensus
It's close — Bosch 800 Series French Door Refrigerator (7.3) and Bosch Counter-Depth Refrigerator (800 Series) (7.3) score nearly the same. Pick on the trade-offs that matter to you.
Dimension by dimension
 800 Series French Door RefrigeratorCounter-Depth Refrigerator (800 Series)
Reliability & Durability 7.3 5.0
User Sentiment 7.5 10.0
Complaint Severity 7.8 7.5
Consensus Strength 3.5 2.9
Value for Money 3.6 2.3
Owner Advocacy 8.9 10.0
Bosch 800 Series French Door Refrigerator

This is the fridge for people who value peace and quiet over raw storage volume. The dual compressors run so silently you'll forget it's there, and VitaFresh drawers genuinely extend produce life, but counter-depth means you're trading 20% of interior space for that flush built-in look. The ice maker drops cubes into an unreachable gap behind the drawer, forcing you to pull the bin every few months to fish out orphaned ice, an absurd flaw at this price. Buy it if you want whisper-quiet reliability and a clean kitchen line; skip it if you need maximum cubic feet per dollar or can't stomach premium pricing for a design that prioritizes aesthetics over capacity.

Bosch Counter-Depth Refrigerator (800 Series)

The 800 Series is Bosch's premium counter-depth play, and it does sit flush with cabinetry like it promises, but the 72-inch height requirement is a real problem: most standard openings top out at 70 inches, so measure twice before you fall in love. The bigger question is value. Current USA-made models dropped the salt water softener that came on older German units (unclear if that mattered day-to-day), and Hisense sells a nearly identical fridge for half the price with the same internals under a different badge. If the Bosch name and the fit work for your kitchen, it's a solid choice; if you're counting dollars or your ceiling is standard height, the math gets harder to justify.