Battery-powered induction stoves could be the future of clean cooking

This latest technical innovation, now starting to ship, means you can use an electric range with just a standard 120-volt outlet.
By Alison F. Takemura

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induction cooktop that resembles turn table and Electrified Life logo
Induction cooktop with a battery. (Impulse Labs; Binh Nguyen/Canary Media)

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Canary Media’s Electrified Life column shares real-world tales, tips, and insights to demystify what individuals can do to shift their homes and lives to clean electric power. Canary thanks EnergySage for its support of the column.

In 2021, Alyssa Cheung’s old gas stove was making her anxious. Cheung was about to have a baby girl, and she wanted to protect her daughter’s developing lungs from the harmful pollution that fossil-gas stoves spew. I was scared of the health impacts,” she tells me.

Cheung was eager to adopt a cleaner method of cooking for her family and the planet: an electric induction stove. But a major hurdle stood in the way. Her 1940s San Francisco home didn’t have the electrical infrastructure to accommodate an ordinary induction range, the kind you can buy at a big-box store. Those ranges need a 240-volt outlet; she only had standard 120-volt outlets in her kitchen.

So in 2022, after her daughter was born, Cheung became one of the first customers to put down a deposit with startup Copper for a new kind of induction stove — one that can plug into the wall without any electrical upgrades. That stove draws on the trickle of electricity from a 120-volt outlet to charge its own battery, allowing it to provide the bursts of power needed for cooking even without a 240-volt socket.

This March, Copper delivered and installed Cheung’s gleaming new range, which features an induction cooktop that heats pans directly using electromagnetism and an electric-resistance oven. The process took less than two hours, and Copper even carted away her 1940s Wedgewood gas stove to recycle it.

Asian American woman with black hair cracks an egg into a wok on her induction stove.
Alyssa Cheung cooks on startup Copper’s induction stove, which comes with a built-in battery. (Courtesy of Alyssa Cheung)

The induction range has a hefty $5,999 price tag before clean energy incentives (more on those below), but it’s been totally worth it,” Cheung says. Plus, Cheung, who works on the building-decarbonization team at the California Public Utilities Commission, was happy to be an early adopter of a technology that could let households — and home chefs — break up with fossil fuels more easily.

Cheung’s experience might be a snapshot of the future of clean cooking. Battery-powered induction stoves are, at this point, a high-end and scarce product. But that could change in the years to come as the Berkeley, California–based Copper and San Francisco–based Impulse Labs begin to ship their battery-powered ranges to more customers. Here’s what you need to know about the simmering battery-based cooking revolution.

Calculating the costs 

The two startups offer products that differ in some key ways. Copper’s product is a full range — cooktop and oven — with a 5-kilowatt-hour battery, while Impulse’s is a cooktop with a 3-kilowatt-hour battery. While both plug into 120-volt outlets, Impulse’s cooktop can alternatively be hardwired into a 240-volt outlet to feed energy back into the home. Both start at $5,999 before tax.

That’s a steep price, especially compared with some of the best-reviewed alternatives on the market. Among gas ranges, the top pick from The New York Times review site Wirecutter can be found for $699. The site’s choice of electric-resistance range is $747.50. As for induction models, Wirecutter put this $2,798 option above the rest.

But customers who get an induction stove with a built-in battery can get some financial aid. The landmark 2022 Inflation Reduction Act provides a federal tax credit for batteries at least 3 kilowatt-hours in size, giving customers 30 percent of the installation cost off their federal tax bill. Both startups say this tax credit applies to their products, bringing down the price to $4,199.

Lower-income households can combine this tax credit with a rebate for electric stoves — part of an IRA program that’s administered by the states — worth up to $840. So far, the rebate is available only in New York. But California, Hawaii, Maine, New Mexico, Rhode Island, Washington, and Wisconsin have been awarded funding to set up their own programs, and several others have applied.

Local incentives, too, might be available in your area; Impulse has a helpful list. And be sure to search the web for induction rebate” and the name of your state, utility, or town. If available, these rebates will typically save you hundreds of dollars.

Skipping electrical upgrades

Despite the high price tag of battery-powered induction stoves, Weldon Kennedy, cofounder and chief marketing officer of Copper, argues they can still save time and money for certain customers.

Wanting to swap out a gas stove can trigger a cascade of other issues, including needing new electric wiring or a bigger panel or, if you don’t have enough amps, getting more power delivered from the utility to the home. These electrical-service updates can cost $2,500 to an eye-watering $40,000 if the utility needs to upgrade nearby grid infrastructure. (It’s well worth it to first try to use strategies that reduce a home’s power demand.)

If you already have enough amps, or if you need to upgrade your service anyway to accommodate a heat pump or other electric appliances, you still may not have a 240-volt outlet where you want your stove.

Wiring a new outlet is a much cheaper and easier fix than upgrading your service — Cheung was quoted around $1,000 — but it can still be a pain. If your kitchen walls contain asbestos or are coated in lead paint, cutting into them becomes complicated and costlier, Kennedy says.

A device that plugs into a typical wall outlet makes the complication just go away,” Kennedy notes. Consumers might not only save money but also avoid the headache of juggling these projects. That’s crucial: The easier the transition, the better the chances of getting the more than 40 million households cooking with gas to switch.

More reasons to love induction, with or without a battery

Those who don’t stand to save money with this product may still appreciate other features, like the fact that these stoves can automatically optimize charging based on when power is cleanest and cheapest, and help relieve stress on the grid.

Having a battery also means induction stoves still work during an outage. Copper’s range, with its 5 kilowatt-hours of storage, has enough backup energy to cook four or five meals, Kennedy says. Cheung likes knowing that reserve is there should she need it.

For now, these products are in their early stages — but growth could be on the horizon.

Copper, which has sold hundreds of units, is installing its range within California and adding New York and other markets in 2025, Kennedy says. Impulse, which has over 10,000 waitlist sign-ups, will be shipping cooktops in the last quarter of the year throughout the continental U.S., according to a company representative. Both startups are now taking preorders from residents across the country — and developing other appliances with batteries to make home electrification simpler.

And whether you’re eager to be an early adopter of battery-based induction or prefer to instead snap up a standard induction range from your local appliance store, Cheung says the experience of electromagnetic cooking is hard to beat.

The smooth ceramic-glass surface is a dream to clean — as easy as wiping down a countertop, she says. And the kitchen is more comfortable without open flames. It’s way less hot when we cook.” 

Yet the new stove is powerful, Cheung, who is Chinese American, notes: Oil in her flat-bottomed wok heats up so much faster than when she cooked with gas, making it easier to cook tastier food, she says.

Many professional chefs love induction, but some have debated whether induction cooktops can get as hot as gas flames to achieve the coveted flavor of wok hei, Cantonese for breath of the wok.” For Cheung at least, the level of heat and wok hei that I achieve on induction is totally comparable to what I achieved on gas — maybe even better because I’m impatient.”

But the biggest improvement of all is the comfort she now feels about her daughter’s health.

We spend a lot of time in our kitchen. We’re cooking, cleaning, cutting fruit … We have a speaker in there, so we’re dancing,” she explains. Our toddler constantly moves in and out of the kitchen with us, and now I’m not shooing her away [to protect her lungs]. I have so much peace of mind, and so much more joy being together as a family in the kitchen.”

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Alison F. Takemura is staff writer at Canary Media. She reports on home electrification, building decarbonization strategies and the clean energy workforce.