

🔥 Cook Like a Pro Anywhere with Duxtop’s Power & Precision!
The Duxtop Professional Portable Induction Cooktop delivers commercial-grade 1800W power with 20 precise power and temperature presets, housed in a durable stainless steel frame. Its sensor touch panel with a large LCD screen offers intuitive control, while the portable design supports heavy cookware up to 65 lbs. With 83% energy efficiency and easy cleanup, it’s engineered for millennial professionals who demand performance, style, and convenience in every meal.








| Best Sellers Rank | #37,408 in Kitchen & Dining ( See Top 100 in Kitchen & Dining ) #51 in Countertop Burners |
| Customer Reviews | 4.4 out of 5 stars 1,666 Reviews |
S**R
High quality induction
I used this to replace my range top. So happy I did. It very functional, easy to use and clean up is a dream. It heats the cookware fast and cooks food beautifully. I love that it is portable so I can bring it outside for long cooking sessions in summer (frying, canning, processing poultry etc.) It does run a fan to dissipate heat but I do not find it overly loud. If I ever find the need for a second burner I would definitely purchase another. Highly recommend.
C**D
It's a big boy.
TLDR: Nice. I'm comparing the Secura Professional against the smaller one that I've had for almost 3yrs now, the Secura 9100MC Portable. Photos (from left to right): 1. The portable (left) with my 10in All-Clad fry pan vs professional with a 12qt All-Clad stock pot. 2. The portable (left) with my 8qt All-Clad stock pot vs professional with the 12qt. 3. The professional with the 10in fry pan, and a 12in ruler on the side for scale. 4. Same as (3), but from the front. Why induction? I live in a desert, and a while back I got tired of the heat radiating from my stovetop fighting with the AC for dominance. The stove was winning. So I bought an induction stovetop to more efficiently heat the cookware. It worked. Hot cookware still radiates heat, of coure, but at least the stovetop's "leaky" heating was solved. Why this one? I bought this because I wanted to make a larger pot of broth and I because I needed to cook it for longer. The portable has served me well, but being the portable it is smaller and doesn't have the heavy reinforced structure of its bigger brother. It only supports about 20lbs max, hence why I've only been using an 8qt stock pot. I've been making broth from chicken scraps and bones and vegetables for a while, but I wanted to make more, and more means a bigger pot, and bigger pot with more water is too heavy. Also, for some reason the portable only has a 2hr max timer (might have something to do with cooling the heating elements). To make a good broth, I need to simmer for much longer. The professional is a stainless steel beast that is rated to support 65lbs. That's more than enough for a full 12qt. And it has a 10hr timer, which I can reset if I need to go for longer. Temperature control: Once it is at temperature, it seems to hold well. On my first time making broth, I brought it to a boil, which took about 3hrs because I was being gentle with the heating. If I had cranked the power level to 9000 it would have gone faster. Once it was boiling, I put the lid on, switched to temperature mode and set it at 200F. I set the timer for 10hrs, and then reset it a couple times so that it would go for a full 24hrs. It never overflowed. This tells me that it never went above the boiling point, so I'd say long term temperature control is pretty good. Coming _up_ to temperature though is a different story. It is quite...eager. In my fry pan I use cooking oil rated for smoking point above 400F. When I turn the stovetop on and use temperature mode set to 300F, it reaches smoking point in less than 30sec. I don't have a thermometer, so I can't get an estimate of the real temperature, but whatever it is, it appears to drastically overshoot at first. But that's only part of the story. The cause is mentioned in the manual, saying that the temperature sensor is below the surface of the cooktop and therefore can differ from the actual temperature. This behavior wasn't observed when I was cooking a big pot full of broth, which tells me that as long as I'm cooking something that can absorb the influx of energy long enough for the cooktop below it to conduct heat from the cookware and reach temperature, then I'm golden. A 10in fry pan with a little bit of oil isn't enough. I had the same issue with the portable. In practice, I compensate for this by bringing it up to temperature in a more constant and controlled power mode. By practice, I've learned to use power mode 7, and once it reaches smoke point, I set it back to temp mode and it seems okay. This isn't a big deal if you're more patient than me and can wait for power mode 5 or 6 to reach temperature. Point is, it's workable. Build quality: - Very sturdy, as mentioned previously. - I miss the tacticle buttons of the portable, but since the touch-sensitive surface is covered with a thin layer of glass, it is really easy to clean, and in the long run, I will favor easy to clean over tactile buttons. - In the 3rd picture (professional from the side), an overhang is visible on the back. This is nice. I've accidentally boiled over my 8qt pot on a number of occassions, and when that happens, it runs over the back and slips down the sides of the vent. That's a little bit of a pain to clean. With the overhang bolted to the back of the professional, that isn't going to happen. If it boils over, it will still drip off the back, but the radiator vent will be untouched and I won't need to clean it. This is nice. - The feet are big, thick, and fastened to the frame with screws. This is much better than the glued-on pads for the portable. The consequence is that the underside of the professional sits almost an inch higher than the portable, but if you're buying this thing, you're not doing it for the compactness, so it shouldn't be an issue. - It sounds like it has a larger fan than the portable. In practice, it doesn't sound much louder though, so I'm guessing that it's a bigger fan moving at slower speed that still ends up moving more ai. As a result, this thing can run for hours on end and not overheat. Quirks: - There are no "temp" or "power" mode buttons like on the portable. Instead, use the "Menu" button to switch between them. - If the professional's timer is active, pressing the Menu button to switch between temp/power modes resets the timers. The timer can't go up to 24hrs, so I'm resetting it anyway over the course of making broth, so this quirk doesn't impact me. Honestly though, I couldn't really make a good case for the timer _not_ resetting upon switching modes. It's just a quirk. Overall, I'm pleased with it.
W**E
Looks professional and has held up well
I bought this stovetop over a year ago from Amazon. I use this stovetop multiple times almost every day. I use it almost exclusively unless I need to use more than one skillet or pot at the same time. This unit has given me zero issues and works consistently the same every time. The controls are intuitive and easy to use and the ability to control the temperature is as good as gas and way better than traditional electric stovetops. It also has the benefit of not heating my house up during the summer months like the gas stove does. Everyone who has been to my house and had the pleasure of using it also thinks is great. One of my friends even bought one for himself after using mine. If feels well made, it's easy to clean and is portable enough to take on location when required. When cleaned up it looks like the day I bought it even after 1000s of uses. If I can think of any gripes, the only one I can think of is the stovetop does emit an irritating high pitched noise when run at max power with certain pans of mine. This is rarely a problem since I very rarely ever need to run the unit at maximum power and I'm almost always listening to headphones in the kitchen anyway. Even going from 10 to 9.5 power eliminates the issue.
M**T
Works on (small!) Solar - helping to reduce my carbon footprint
For more than a decade I’ve been living solo, off-grid, in a three-season shed using propane for all my creature comforts - heat, dinner, wash-up and personal hygiene. Since purchasing the Duxtop induction cooktop, I have eliminated my use of propane for making dinner, washing dishes and hair & face wash-up. My solar energy system is small, 400 watts with a 2200 watt pure sine inverter. It powers all my needs. Initially I built it to power a DC fridge, but since have used it for so much more. A note of caution: if running on solar, it’s critical that you run this cooktop on only the purest of power sources, such as an inverter supplying a pure sine wave. The cooktop is said to draw 1800 watts on full power (level 10). However, I found it actually draws slightly less than that. Regardless, that’s more than 4 times the power my system is capable of generating, yet with the features of the Duxtop I achieve an appreciable level of energy efficiency. This cooktop, like others designed for the counter, cycles its power draw when set below half power (level 5). For me, that’s perfect and I feel it is the greatest factor in its efficiency. Some reviews here have spoke ill of this design feature and perhaps rightly so for specific types of cooking. I’m just a simple guy cooking simple foods like stir-frys, sautéed veggies and boiled pastas and such. The Duxtop does an equal or better job than my propane cookstove, and with zero emissions! The use of this induction cooktop, with on average 30-45 minutes of use per evening subtracts only 6-10% from my battery storage which is entirely replaced the next morning with an hour of sun. The unit has a separate button for boiling water, which ramps the power to full (10!), and will bring a boil in under 10 minutes. That’s unnecessary for my use. I found I can boil a 1.5 Qt pot in 5 minutes using half power (level 5). Then, I add my food, bring it back to boil and turn it down, allowing it to cycle and save power. The power ramp, logically, becomes more aggressive the closer you reach level 5. Overall, the cycling seems gentle enough that it’ll be okay for the long term health of my inverter. Level 5 will draw about 800 watts. All the levels between 3 and 5, cycle from 6 watts to somewhere near 800 watts. Levels 2.5 and below only reach to about 600 watts. Each half setting is achieved by how long the unit rests at the top or bottom of the cycle. Yes, as others have claimed, the actual watts vary and it is likely designed to perform that way on purpose. This unit has half settings which lends a certain degree of finesse that other units don’t. I specifically like the lowest settings, something my propane stove never could achieve without burning the food. The Duxtop even has a warming button said to hold the pan (not the food), at 140º, which I believe is even lower than the lowest power setting. These low settings allow for and actually work in keeping the food from burning or boiling over. The unit also has a temperature mode which allows you to set a specific temperature. I found it difficult to monitor cooking in this mode because I personally don't think in terms of temperature when controlling my stove top cooking. I'm use to numbers and power settings. Also, the unit sets the temperature of the pan or pot and not the food, so I think there's a bit of a mis-correlation that happens there between food temp and pot/pan temp that makes it somewhat difficult to track. The warming circle on this unit is drawn out on the surface to be about 8 inches. I would suggest that the element inside is actually a bit smaller. I found no heat distribution issues using an 8 inch pan, even a 10 inch (cast iron), pan does quite well. It’s when I tried a 12 inch cast iron pan that I found the outer perimeter to be much less than hot. Still, I was successful in completing my sautéed meal. I found that I needed to think differently. The coolness of the edges required me to treat the pan like a wok. I could rest some items on the side while cooking other items in the center. It was important to keep most things moving around the pan. Despite this, I won’t use this pan again. I have a mini, flat bottom (8”) wok that works great for this type of cooking. The build quality of this Duxtop unit, I feel is quite good. If not commercial grade, it's quite close. The higher price point is worth it in my opinion to have a fully encapsulated unit in stainless steel. The glass top is nicely sealed around its perimeter from spills and there’s a stainless steel extension off the back which I imagine helps protect the cord & socket (stout quality) and fan exhaust openings. I also chose this unit for the touch surface buttons. I have too many appliances with those analog buttons under a plastic face where that plastic face has soon broken away, revealing a hole with a tiny button inside. The feet of the unit are also substantial. Made from rubber, they stand about an inch above the counter. Caution: they may leave scuff marks on your white Formica counter top. As I understand, these units require a fan for cooling. This one is no exception. It runs as soon as you engage the power button and turns off 2-3 minutes after you shut the unit off. The sound level is equal to the sound of a microwave. No biggie for me. If sound is your pet peeve, then the beep you get when you press any button or remove your pan from the surface of the cooktop, will be a sore spot. I wish it didn’t beep so loud and so frequently when I remove the pan during cooking. It would be far better to have it beep once, then beep maybe 10 or 15 seconds before the unit will shut off. Not every 2 seconds until I replace the pan. There’s been reviews complaining about piercing, high-pitched sounds coming from these units (in general, not necessarily this unit). I have not experienced this with this Duxtop unit with all but one of my pans and only to a small extent. It leads me to believe that, yes it is a real thing, but it may not be the cooktop, but the quality of the pan in use and the particular ingredients inside that pan. There is certainly a different learning curve when cooking with induction and perhaps more so with these portable units. I am still finding my way and experimenting to find the best efficiency. This cooktop has broadened my capabilities in cooking and in other simple ways while “roughing” it off-grid, like the ease of having hot water (almost on demand). At the same time, it has reduced my carbon footprint and with its build quality and features, it should last a long time. I would highly recommend it.
S**T
TRUE PROFESSIONAL PERFORMANCE
There is an old expression that one would use to praise another one's actions or performance that went: "Now you're cooking with gas!" Well, that needs to be updated to "Now you're cooking with induction!" Seriously, I have been eyeing this particular Duxtop model for some time, and induction countertop burners in general for some number of years. I've looked at them in person and online, and finally decided to purchase this Duxtop commercial model. I have had it now for a little over a week, and I find myself using it daily, and even going out of my way to use it over my "high performance" GE Profile Dual Fuel Range. My range has a gas cooktop that has been good, but I have always wanted to try induction. This Duxtop commercial model outperforms even my high output burner on my range. Boiling water is a snap, whether for a pot of coffee, or a big pot of pasta; melting butter, or clarifying butter, frying and sautéeing, cooking slowly, keeping food warm, this Duxtop is simply a dream come true. The unit itself is very well built. The cabinet is stainless steel, the cooktop itself is thick black glass, and the touch controls are sensitive and responsive. There are quick-start buttons, and three quick keystrokes get you cooking in a jiffy. You can select between "power levels" 0.5 (Very Low) to 10 (High), and you can alternately shift to temperature mode. Temperature mode seems to be pretty accurate; I have set the temperatures to varying levels for different foods to hold at 140°, 180°, 200°,, and each time, I fitted the pot with two separate probe thermometers on opposite sides of the pan. In each case, I used either water, or a dense vegetable soup with chickpeas. In all cases, the Duxtop warmed the contents of the pan evenly, and held the contents at the preset temperatures, with a little variation of about ten degrees on either side, as the burner cycled on and off. I found this variation to be totally acceptable, and my next step will be to attempt deep frying. I have used this for pressure cooking dried legumes, regular boiling for pastas, soups, coffee, tea, etc., simmering and slow-cooking soups, sautéeing, and shallow frying... all results have really been to absolute perfection. Cookware to be used with an induction cooktop must be made of ferrous metal, e.g. iron, cast iron (Lodge, Wagner, Le Creuset, Staub, etc.), stainless steel to which a magnet will stick (many brands such as All-Clad, Cuisinart, Viking). It will NOT work with cookware made from ceramic, Pyrex, Corningware, aluminum, copper. The best way to test your cookware is to take a standard kitchen magnet, and test the bottoms of your cookware. If the magnet sticks, you're good to go; if not, then reserve that for your stove. Speaking of cast iron, and this Duxtop commercial model, this particular model can withstand a total weight capacity of sixty-five (65) pounds! This model is, as I said, well built, heavy for its size, and very, very stable on the countertop. I shall give updates, if I find them necessary, as to continued performance and longevity, but it is my instinct that this is one of the best choices I have ever made in terms of having a good, high quality accessory burner to supplement my stove. If I had to voice a regret, it would only be that I should not have waited this long to make this purchase. It is well worth the money! As a matter of fact, I am going to order another one soon. You can buy this with confidence. MARCH 2021: THIRTEEN MONTH IN-SERVICE UPDATE: Performance is just as excellent thirteen months later as the first day I plugged it in and put into service. I literally use this Duxtop Portable Induction Cooktop every single day. From boiling water for coffee or tea, to sauté or simmer, or frying, this appliance is tops!
O**R
Excellent quality and design.
Very well made and obviously designed by experienced induction cooks. No cheap components. Heavy duty in every way. Heats very fast. Cooling fan is strong and quiet.
M**N
Fantastic, Heavy-Duty Cooktop
I’ve had this burner for two years and use it mostly for cooking huge batches of food and canning. It’s super heavy duty and exceptionally well constructed, with two temperature modes (1-10 and degrees), a 12-hour timer, and a display lock button to prevent accidental setting changes. The temperature controls provide great precision when needing to achieve or maintain certain temperatures or cooking conditions (from just warm to a very vigorous boil). The commercial size enables me to confidently use very large stainless steel pots for cooking and canning. It will also flash a visual warning of “Hot” after you turn it off, for safety reasons. I couldn’t be happier with this cooktop!
R**H
Looks good, feels beefy, **UNBEARABLE** possibly dangerous 17kHz coil whine.
I scaling up a small hobby and wanted the ability to heat as safely and portably as possible. The induction cooktop is absolutely perfect and I loved the beefy build and known brand of this specific product. People complain about the fan being noisy and loud beeps, I'm thinking *perfect*...electronics stay cool in hot environments and I'll know when folks are using it. Unfortunately when I first fired it up on Boil I was greeted with this piercing extremely high pitched whine. I understand the physics of induction cooktops and immediately recognized it as 'coil whine' in which the pulsing current and resulting magnetic field cause the coil, adjacent parts and cookware all to resonate. Unfortunately in this case it's *incredibly* loud. My daughter the room over immediately reacted and came in to the kitchen with a confused look, cupping her ears yelling *what is THAT?!?*. I tried several pieces of cookware and the effect was slightly different here and there but largely the same. I've attached a spectrogram of a recording of the sound, from my office, *with the door closed* from at least 30' away. After powering it up and a few dots from the beeps of the menu you can see the coil waking up at 17kHz. I turned it off after 10 seconds or so and It's been close to ten minutes of me farting around with the audio file and screenshot and my ears are still ringing with some kind of induced tinnitus. Something I'm not happy about as I struggled with it for almost a year back in 2018. I don't understand how companies can release a product like this. It's like buying a new car with a horrific belt squeal. Sure it can happen but TEST FOR IT. Holy cow. What a massive disappointment.
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