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Chef vs Jenkins comparison

 

Comparison Buyer's Guide

Executive SummaryUpdated on Mar 5, 2025

Review summaries and opinions

We asked business professionals to review the solutions they use. Here are some excerpts of what they said:
 

ROI

Sentiment score
5.9
Chef improved ROI by reducing deployment time, automating tasks, and reallocating staff, although revenue impact varied by project.
Sentiment score
8.5
Jenkins provides excellent ROI by being free, enhancing satisfaction, streamlining deployment, reducing errors, and lowering costs.
The return has been far more hours saved than spent.
Technical Architecture Support at a tech vendor with 10,001+ employees
We have seen significant improvement in the time and the way we make changes to the infrastructure.
Principal Engineer at Wipro Limited
I have seen a return on investment with Chef because we definitely need fewer employees to manage infrastructure.
Principal DevOps engineer at Autodesk, Inc.
 

Customer Service

Sentiment score
5.6
Chef's support varies; some praise community resources and quick responses, but others find it costly and slow.
Sentiment score
6.5
Jenkins relies on robust community support for answers, while CloudBees offers varying response times for additional assistance.
Chef codes, which are in Ruby language, are easily available on Chef Supermarket.
Senior Cloud Engineer at a tech services company with 201-500 employees
We usually work with the Chef teams and community support, who are always willing to assist.
Software Engineer and Tester at Safaricom
 

Scalability Issues

Sentiment score
7.3
Chef efficiently scales in diverse environments, with effective cloud integration, managing large infrastructures and ensuring stable performance.
Sentiment score
7.2
Jenkins is scalable and adaptable, effectively managing many jobs, with enhanced capabilities via Kubernetes and Docker integration.
We leverage both to achieve the best option possible for scaling.
Software Engineer and Tester at Safaricom
Chef's scalability is evident as the public sector organization I work at serves a population of 5 million, and we have had no problems with scaling.
Technical Architecture Support at a tech vendor with 10,001+ employees
Server size actually depends on the number of clients, and you need to consider this during your setup.
Senior Cloud Engineer at Globant
 

Stability Issues

Sentiment score
7.7
Chef offers high stability, smooth deployment, and scalability with strong user satisfaction, competing well with alternatives like Ansible.
Sentiment score
7.1
Jenkins is generally stable with occasional issues, but performance improves significantly with better hardware and recent updates.
It is a good tool to work with, offering a strong developer experience and community support.
Software Engineer and Tester at Safaricom
Chef is stable.
Technical Architecture Support at a tech vendor with 10,001+ employees
In my experience, Chef is quite stable most of the time.
Principal Engineer at Wipro Limited
 

Room For Improvement

Chef needs performance, integration, and usability improvements, with enhanced features, support, and compatibility to meet modern DevOps demands.
Jenkins requires UI/UX enhancements, plugin stability, better integration, improved documentation, and more effective troubleshooting for user satisfaction.
On support, I think there should be more focus on how we can achieve AI automations in answering questions for beginners and addressing deep concerns without general manual management.
Software Engineer and Tester at Safaricom
If they can remove the agent installation on the nodes and combine both the Chef server and workstation into one server, that will provide a significant benefit in cost for the clients.
Senior Cloud Engineer at a tech services company with 201-500 employees
To improve Chef, making an interface with another language such as Python or Java that is well understood, as capable as Ruby, and even more widely adopted would demystify it a bit.
Technical Architecture Support at a tech vendor with 10,001+ employees
 

Setup Cost

Chef offers flexible pricing and licensing, but node-based costs challenge scalability, prompting interest in more flexible pricing options.
Jenkins is cost-effective and open-source, with additional costs for infrastructure and an enterprise edition offering extra features.
The licensing cost is zero for Chef if you are using the free version.
Senior Cloud Engineer at a tech services company with 201-500 employees
Licensing looks reasonable compared to the manual work of managing whole data centers with even 10,000 servers.
Software Engineer and Tester at Safaricom
My experience with pricing, setup cost, and licensing is that we sidestepped it by using Cinc because none of the functionality that is exclusive to the paid version was actually in use in the organization.
Technical Architecture Support at a tech vendor with 10,001+ employees
 

Valuable Features

Chef automates infrastructure with code, offering scalability, ease of use, and integrates seamlessly with CI/CD, enhancing efficiency.
Jenkins excels in automation, integration, and scalability with its robust ecosystem, enhancing collaboration, efficiency, and reliability.
Security is a key aspect that Chef can automate, monitor new features that are available, and even do patches without you getting involved.
Software Engineer and Tester at Safaricom
When you have infrastructure as code and you already have everything apart from the environment-specific config, which you can specify in variables, then it is not only more repeatable and reliable, it is faster.
Technical Architecture Support at a tech vendor with 10,001+ employees
Using Chef for automating infrastructure and applications in my organization has helped us reduce manual tasks by more than forty percent, thereby saving significant revenue for the client.
Principal Engineer at Wipro Limited
 

Categories and Ranking

Chef
Ranking in Build Automation
13th
Average Rating
7.8
Reviews Sentiment
6.6
Number of Reviews
26
Ranking in other categories
Release Automation (5th), Configuration Management (11th)
Jenkins
Ranking in Build Automation
1st
Average Rating
8.0
Reviews Sentiment
7.0
Number of Reviews
92
Ranking in other categories
No ranking in other categories
 

Mindshare comparison

As of June 2026, in the Build Automation category, the mindshare of Chef is 2.1%, up from 0.4% compared to the previous year. The mindshare of Jenkins is 9.1%, down from 10.5% compared to the previous year. It is calculated based on PeerSpot user engagement data.
Build Automation Mindshare Distribution
ProductMindshare (%)
Jenkins9.1%
Chef2.1%
Other88.8%
Build Automation
 

Featured Reviews

G Srivastava - PeerSpot reviewer
Senior Cloud Engineer at a tech services company with 201-500 employees
Agent setup and complexity have limited automation benefits but have reduced manual patching work
There are other automation tools, configuration management tools in the market, which offer many good functionalities compared to Chef. For Chef, we need to install those agents, the Chef client, on all those nodes. That is another heinous task to perform on those nodes. Compared with other tools, they do not require any agent; they simply push configurations to all the clients. Chef needs to improve on this agent installation on all those nodes. I would say that the agent configuration is required, and we need to manage the workstation, the Chef server, and then the Chef client. These two or three things are very difficult. It is a time-taking task compared with other configuration management tools. They need to compete with other tools, such as Ansible or Terraform. They should work on their agent part. If they can remove the agent installation on the nodes and combine both the Chef server and workstation into one server, that will provide a significant benefit in cost for the clients. They should aim for an agentless architecture rather than an agent-based architecture, which will help other customers. That is a very difficult thing because I have stopped using Chef. If you have very good developers who are skilled in Ruby language and can write codes in the Chef recipe, then those developers should start using Chef.
JI
Principal Software Engineer at a financial services firm with 5,001-10,000 employees
Efficient resource allocation and robust workflow with autoscaling capabilities
In Kubernetes, we use node-based architecture with nodes and pods and follow practices like RBAC and rollback. Multiple pods can run concurrently. We benefit from Kubernetes' ability to autoscale pods and use horizontal pod autoscalers to adjust the number of pods based on metrics like CPU or memory usage, ensuring efficient resource allocation and stability under load.
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Top Industries

By visitors reading reviews
Comms Service Provider
11%
Financial Services Firm
9%
Computer Software Company
8%
Construction Company
8%
Financial Services Firm
19%
Manufacturing Company
13%
Construction Company
7%
Comms Service Provider
6%
 

Company Size

By reviewers
Large Enterprise
Midsize Enterprise
Small Business
By reviewers
Company SizeCount
Small Business3
Midsize Enterprise9
Large Enterprise20
By reviewers
Company SizeCount
Small Business27
Midsize Enterprise15
Large Enterprise58
 

Questions from the Community

What is your experience regarding pricing and costs for Chef?
My experience with pricing, setup cost, and licensing is that we sidestepped it by using Cinc because none of the functionality that is exclusive to the paid version was actually in use in the orga...
What needs improvement with Chef?
I do not have anything in mind at this time for how Chef could be improved.
What is your primary use case for Chef?
My main use case for Chef is configuration management to set up systems, provision software, and keep configurations up to date. I create Chef recipes for setup and install needed software from a c...
How does Tekton compare with Jenkins?
When you are evaluating tools for automating your own GitOps-based CI/CD workflow, it is important to keep your requirements and use cases in mind. Tekton deployment is complex and it is not very e...
What is your experience regarding pricing and costs for Jenkins?
Jenkins is used in many companies to save money, especially within R&D divisions, by avoiding the expenses of proprietary tools.
What needs improvement with Jenkins?
I do not have any notes for improvement.
 

Comparisons

 

Overview

 

Sample Customers

Facebook, Standard Bank, GE Capital, Nordstrom, Optum, Barclays, IGN, General Motors, Scholastic, Riot Games, NCR, Gap
Airial, Clarus Financial Technology, cubetutor, Metawidget, mysocio, namma, silverpeas, Sokkva, So Rave, tagzbox
Find out what your peers are saying about Chef vs. Jenkins and other solutions. Updated: June 2026.
900,747 professionals have used our research since 2012.