Gas vs Induction Range Cooker: Which Should You Choose?

Gas vs Induction Range Cooker: Which Should You Choose?

One of the biggest decisions when buying a range cooker is the hob type. Gas has been the traditional choice for serious cooks for generations, but induction technology has improved dramatically. This guide breaks down everything you need to know to make the right call.

What’s the Difference?

Gas hobs produce a flame beneath the pan. Heat is immediate and fully adjustable. Induction hobs use electromagnetic fields to generate heat directly in the base of a compatible pan — the hob surface itself stays cool.

A dual fuel range cooker pairs a gas hob with an electric oven — the most popular UK configuration. A full induction range cooker uses an induction hob with an electric oven.

Cooking Performance

Responsiveness: Gas wins on instant response — you see the flame change immediately. Induction is also highly responsive but there’s a fractional lag.

Maximum heat: Modern induction can reach very high temperatures — a quality induction zone boils water faster than a gas burner.

Low simmer: Induction edges ahead — you can set very specific power levels. Gas’s lowest flame can still be hotter than ideal for delicate sauces.

Wok cooking: Gas wins. A triple crown burner delivers intense heat across a broad area that’s hard to replicate with induction, especially with round-bottomed woks.

Safety

Induction is significantly safer — no open flame, the surface barely heats up, automatic pan detection, no risk of gas leaks. A clear advantage in households with young children.

Installation Requirements

Gas: Requires a mains gas supply, Gas Safe registered engineer connection, standard 13-amp socket, extractor hood.

Induction: No gas supply needed, but requires a 32–40amp dedicated electrical circuit (usually needs an electrician), compatible cookware, extractor hood.

Cookware Compatibility

Induction requires magnetic cookware (cast iron, most stainless steel, and enamelled cast iron). Copper, aluminium and some non-stick pans won’t work. Gas works with any pan — no restrictions.

Cleaning

Induction wins clearly. Spills don’t burn on — a quick wipe is usually enough. Gas hobs have pan supports, burner caps and heads that need regular cleaning.

Summary

Gas Induction
Instant response Excellent Very good
Boiling speed Good Faster
Low simmer Good Better
Wok cooking Better Good
Safety Good Safer
Cleaning More effort Easier
Cookware Any pan Magnetic only
Installation Gas supply needed No gas needed

 

Choose gas if: you value instant visual feedback, cook with a wok regularly, or prefer the traditional experience.
Choose induction if: you have no gas supply, have young children, or want easier cleaning and better efficiency.

Explore Gas & Induction Range Cookers

Gas and dual fuel:

Induction and electric:

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