Stop Ruining Your Pans: The Truth About Copper & Induction

Author : Copper Brazier | Published On : 22 Apr 2026

Let’s be real for a second.

You just spent a small fortune on that gorgeous, shiny copper frypan. You’ve seen the YouTube chefs flambéing sauces. You want that legendary heat control. So, you bring it home, slap it on your fancy new induction cooktop, and… nothing. Or worse, the pan starts wobbling like a drunk toddler.

Or maybe you’re the gas stove warrior. You love your open flame. But suddenly your beautiful copper pan is turning into a splotchy, discolored mess, and you’re screaming, “Why is this happening to me?!”

Stop right there. You aren’t ruining your pans because you’re a bad cook. You’re ruining them because nobody told you the truth about the war between Copper and Induction.

Let me save your cookware (and your sanity).

The Great Misconception: “All Pans Work Everywhere”

Here is the hard truth the big box stores won’t advertise: Copper is not magnetic.

I know, shocking, right? But pure copper is non-ferrous. That means your fancy induction cooktop—which works by creating a magnetic field—cannot "see" your copper pan. To the induction glass, your $300 skillet looks like a plastic tupperware lid.

So, what happens when you force it? You buy a "induction-ready" copper pan that is actually 90% stainless steel with a thin red wrapper. That is not a copper pan. That is a liar in a fancy dress.

Real copper is for response, not for magnets.

Gas vs. Electric: The Real Culprit of Destruction

Now, let’s talk about the rest of you cooking on gas and electric coils. You might think you are safe. You are wrong.

The Gas Stove Problem:
You love that high BTUs. But copper is soft. That heavy cast-iron grate on your gas stove? Every time you slide that copper pan across it to stir your onions, you are scratching gouges into the bottom. Furthermore, gas flames that creep up the sides of the pan (looking at you, small burner + big pan) will permanently anneal the metal. That turns your hard, shiny pan into a warped, dented mess that never sits flat again.

The Electric Coil Problem:
Oh, this one hurts the most. Electric coils heat unevenly. They get red hot, then cold, then hot again. Copper transfers heat so fast that it magnifies the coil's "hot spots." You’ll burn a crater in the center of your risotto while the edges stay raw. And that electric coil’s rough surface? It grinds the copper bottom down like sandpaper. Within a year, you’ll see silver steel poking through the copper. Once that happens, the pan is trash.

The "Lined" Lie

Let me let you in on a secret. Most "copper pans" sold today have a tiny fraction of copper. They are steel cores with a foil wrap. They are heavy, clunky, and behave exactly like your old non-stick pans—just uglier.

Real copper (2.5mm thick or more) is a living metal. It changes color. It patinas. It dents if you drop it. And it cooks like a dream only on low, consistent heat sources like gas (on low-to-medium flame) or traditional radiant heat.

If you put real copper on induction, you are a wizard trying to cast a spell without a wand. It doesn't work.

How To Stop Ruining Your Pan (The 3 Golden Rules)

  1. The Magnet Test: If a magnet sticks to the inside cooking surface, it is not a real copper pan. Walk away.

  2. Gas Lovers, Stop Sliding: Lift the pan, don't drag it. Use a flame tamer if your burner is larger than the pan base.

  3. Induction Owners: Surrender. You cannot use pure copper. You need a hybrid pan, or better yet, keep a separate set of cast iron for induction and a gas burner for your copper.

The Bottom Line

Stop blaming the pan. You bought a Ferrari and tried to drive it on a rocky mountain trail. Copper demands respect. It needs a flame, a gentle touch, and a willingness to polish it now and then.

If you force it onto an induction cooktop or a rough electric coil, you aren't "cooking." You are committing cookware homicide.

Read this blog - What To Know Before Buying Copper Pans For Gas Vs Electric Stoves? 

And listen, if you are ready to stop buying fake, magnetic imposters and you want the real deal—the copper pans that are real and genuine and 100% pure—then you know whom to visit. Copper Brazier is the trusted partner that actually respects the craft. They don't sell you induction gimmicks; they sell you heirloom tools that work on the right stoves. Head over to Copper Brazier for a wide collection of cookware that will make your kitchen (and your great-grandchildren) very happy.