The only meaningful difference between induction cookware and regular cookware is magnetism: induction cookware must attract a magnet, while regular cookware doesn’t need to.
If you have or want an induction cooktop, the pan you use decides whether dinner happens or nothing heats. Regular pans work on gas and electric burners regardless of material — but on an induction cooktop, the pan itself generates the heat through magnetic fields. That changes everything about which pots and pans belong in your kitchen. Here is exactly what separates the two, how to test what you already own, and what to buy next if your current pans won’t stick.
What Makes Induction Cookware Different From Regular Cookware?
Induction cookware contains a magnetic (ferromagnetic) metal in its base that responds to the electromagnetic coil beneath the glass surface. When the cooktop is on, energy passes directly into that metal, heating the pan itself rather than the burner or air around it. Regular cookware relies on heat conducted from a flame, electric coil, or ceramic smoothtop — no magnetism required, which means materials like aluminum, copper, and glass work just fine on gas and electric but sit cold on an induction burner.
You can think of it this way: induction is a handshake between the cooktop and the pan. If the pan doesn’t return the signal — the magnetic field — the cooktop simply won’t transfer energy.
The Magnet Test: How To Check Any Pan In 10 Seconds
Perform this test on any pot or pan you already own. If a magnet sticks firmly to the bottom, the pan works on induction. If it falls off or only weakly clings, it won’t — full stop. This method is recommended by Bosch, Consumer Reports, and GreenPan.
- Grab a magnet — a refrigerator magnet works.
- Place it on the bottom center of the pan, right against the metal, not the sidewall.
- Observe the bond: a strong, solid stick means induction-compatible; a fall or weak grab means it isn’t.
- Check for flatness: even a magnetic pan won’t heat well if the bottom is ridged or dimpled — the base needs full contact with the glass surface.
One catch worth noting: some aluminum pans with a magnetic stainless steel base layer pass the test, while thin non-magnetic stainless pans fail. The magnet never lies.
Material Guide: Which Cookware Works On Induction?
Each material behaves differently. Here is what the market actually uses:
| Material | Works On Induction? | Best For |
|---|---|---|
| Cast iron | Yes, naturally magnetic | Steaks, searing, long braises — retains heat beautifully |
| Magnetic stainless steel | Yes — test first; some grades attract a magnet | Everyday cooking, sauces, browning; durable and oven-safe |
| Non-magnetic stainless (18/10, 18/8) | No | Works on gas/electric only; not induction |
| Carbon steel | Yes, naturally magnetic | Woks, stir-frying; lighter than cast iron |
| Aluminum (plain) | No — unless clad with a magnetic base layer | Lightweight heat conductor; only usable on induction if base is added |
| Copper | No — unless clad with stainless magnetic base | Precision temperature control; pure copper fails induction |
| Glass / Ceramic | No (neither magnetic nor conductive to magnetic fields) | Baking or microwave only; not induction |
What Happens When You Use The Wrong Pan?
The induction cooktop recognizes the pan is missing the magnetic handshake and simply does nothing. The burner stays cold, no heat transfers, and the induction ring flashes a pan-not-detected icon. Pans that are magnetic but too thin heat unevenly, creating hot spots that scorch food — Wirecutter specifically warns against cheap, thin induction pans for this reason. And pans that overhang the coil by more than two inches risk warping over time, because the center heats faster than the edges.
The cooktop itself stays significantly cooler than gas or electric — burn injuries are far less likely — but the learning curve is real. Water boils faster on induction, so you may burn food a few times while you adjust.
Which Type Should You Buy?
If you own an induction cooktop, every pan must be magnetic — you have no choice. If you cook on gas or electric, any material works, so your decision hinges on your preferred heat source and cooking style. Induction owners who want top-tier performance should look for bonded (multi-ply) collections with magnetic-grade stainless steel, like All-Clad’s bonded lineup, or quality enameled cast iron. Thick, flat bases prevent hotspots and hold steady temperature.
For readers ready to upgrade to the right set, our tested roundup of the best cookware for induction stoves breaks down which models perform best and where they fall short.
| Your Cooktop Type | Cookware You Need | What To Avoid |
|---|---|---|
| Induction | Only magnetic materials — cast iron, magnetic stainless, carbon steel, or clad aluminum with magnetic base | Plain aluminum, copper, glass, ceramic, non-magnetic 18/10 stainless |
| Gas | Any material — flat or slightly rounded bases both work | Nothing banned; thin pans may burn unevenly |
| Electric coil / Smoothtop | Any material with a flat base for even contact | Warped or ridged bases that wobble on the burner |
3 Mistakes Induction Users Make And How To Avoid Them
Ignoring pan overhang. A pan that hangs more than two inches past the coil’s outer ring heats unevenly and can warp. Match pan size to the coil — a ten-inch pan on a six-inch coil is too big.
Trusting the painted circle. The circle on the glass often covers a smaller actual coil. Place the pan fully inside it; if the indicator flashes, the pan is positioned wrong.
Rapid preheating. Induction heats fast — thin pans can scorch food before you touch the controls. Preheat magnetic stainless steel pans gradually and lower the setting on thin cookware.
FAQs
Can I use my Le Creuset enameled cast iron on an induction cooktop?
Yes. Enameled cast iron is naturally magnetic and works perfectly on induction, though the raw cast-iron rim may scratch glass. Lift rather than slide the pan to protect the surface.
Why does my pan work on one induction burner but not another?
Some induction cooktops have smaller or less powerful coils on certain zones. A pan that barely passes the magnet test may only trigger the most sensitive burner. Test on all zones to confirm compatibility.
Does induction ruin nonstick pans?
No — but the nonstick coating doesn’t affect induction compatibility. Only the magnetic base matters. Teflon and ceramic nonstick pans are fine on induction as long as a magnet sticks to the bottom.
Is induction cookware more expensive than regular cookware?
High-quality induction sets cost more because they require multi-ply or magnetic-clad construction. But gas-safe pans that lack a magnetic base are not cheaper — the price difference is driven by material quality, not induction labeling.
Can I use a warped pan on induction?
No. A warped or concave base prevents the pan from sitting flat on the glass, interrupting magnetic contact. The cooktop will not energize properly, and you risk cracking the glass.
References & Sources
- Bosch Home. “What Induction Cookware Is Required?” Official guide to magnetic cookware requirements.
- Wirecutter / NYT. “The Best Induction Cookware.” 2026 review recommending All-Clad and enameled cast iron.
- Consumer Reports. “How To Tell If a Pot or Pan Is Induction Compatible.” Magnet test and flatness guidance.
- All-Clad. “Best Pans for Induction Cooktop.” Brand guidance on bonded collections.
- Consumer Reports. “Pros and Cons of Induction Cooktops and Ranges.” Energy efficiency and noise comparisons.
Mo Maruf
I created WellFizz to bridge the gap between vague wellness advice and actionable solutions. My mission is simple: to decode the research and give you practical tools you can actually use.
Beyond the data, I am a passionate traveler. I believe that stepping away from the screen to explore new environments is essential for mental clarity and physical vitality.