If you work in professional catering, you already know that the wrong pan in the wrong slot creates headaches on the buffet line — mismatched lids, food pans that do not sit flush in the chafer, and prep containers that do not fit the blast chiller. The solution is a thorough understanding of the GN pan sizing system: a global standard that makes every piece of your commercial kitchen equipment interoperable.
A Gastronorm (GN) pan — also referred to as a steam table pan, hotel pan, or food pan — is a standardised food container whose outer dimensions follow the Gastronorm measurement system. The standard was first introduced in Switzerland in 1964 when industry associations agreed on compatible square dimensions for pans, trays, and kitchen inserts designed to maximise oven and refrigerator space. It was adopted as the official European standard in 1993 under EN 631.
Today, the GN sizing system is the default in virtually every commercial kitchen across Europe, Asia, the Middle East, and Australia. The only major exceptions are the United States and Canada, which maintain their own domestic system — though even North American operators increasingly source GN-compatible equipment for international hotel brands.