The gas vs. electric range decision shapes how you cook for the next decade, so it deserves more than a coin flip. Choosing between gas, electric radiant, and induction for your Fisher & Paykel range or cooktop comes down to cooking style, kitchen infrastructure, and priorities. Each technology has genuine advantages — here’s an honest comparison to help you weigh them.
Cooking performance
Speed to boil
Winner: Induction. Fisher & Paykel induction boils 1 liter of water in ~3 minutes. Gas takes ~5 minutes. Electric radiant takes ~7 minutes. See our induction technology guide for the physics behind this.
Temperature control
Winner: Induction, then gas. Induction responds to changes instantly. Gas responds in 2-3 seconds (visible flame adjustment). Electric radiant takes 15-30 seconds to change temperature — a frustrating delay when searing or making sauces.
Low-heat cooking
Winner: Induction. Induction can maintain extremely low, consistent temperatures — perfect for melting chocolate or keeping sauces warm. Gas burners have a minimum flame threshold below which they extinguish. Electric elements cycle on and off at low settings, creating temperature fluctuations.
Oven performance
Roughly equal. Gas and electric ovens both do excellent jobs. Gas ovens provide slightly moister heat (good for roasting). Electric ovens provide drier, more even heat (good for baking). Convection fans in both types reduce the difference.
Operating cost
At national average energy prices:
- Gas — Cheapest to operate in most US markets. Natural gas costs roughly 1/3 of electricity per BTU.
- Electric radiant — Most expensive to operate due to low efficiency (65-70% energy transfer).
- Induction — Despite using electricity, operating costs are comparable to gas because of 85-90% efficiency. You use less electricity per cooking task.
Installation requirements
- Gas — Requires a gas supply line (natural gas or propane). Installation must be done by a licensed plumber or gas fitter. If your kitchen doesn’t have a gas line, running one costs from $$500+.
- Electric/Induction — Requires a 240V, 40-50A dedicated circuit. Most kitchens with an electric range already have this. If not, an electrician can install one for from $$200.
Safety
Winner: Induction. No open flame, cool surface (only warms from pan contact), auto-shutoff, and pan detection. Gas poses combustion risks (gas leaks, carbon monoxide) and open flame hazards. Electric radiant surfaces stay hot long after shutoff — a burn risk for children and pets.
Environmental impact
Winner: Induction. No indoor combustion products (gas ranges emit NOx, CO, and formaldehyde — recent studies have raised health concerns about indoor gas combustion). Induction uses electricity, which is increasingly renewable-sourced. Gas is a fossil fuel regardless of source.
Recommendation
Induction if you’re buying new and your kitchen has or can get a 240V circuit. It’s better than gas in almost every measurable way. Gas if you have an existing gas line and prefer visible flame feedback or wok cooking (round-bottom woks need a flame). Electric radiant only if budget is the primary constraint — it’s the least expensive to purchase but the most expensive to operate.
For Fisher & Paykel range repair or installation, schedule service with our specialist technicians.
Gas vs. electric range: key takeaways
Strip the gas vs. electric range debate down and induction comes out ahead on speed, control, safety, and emissions, gas wins on upfront flexibility and flame-based cooking, and electric radiant survives mainly on low purchase price. Match the technology to your existing kitchen infrastructure first — running a new gas line or a 240V circuit can quietly reshape the whole budget.
Keeping your range performing long-term
Each fuel type asks for slightly different upkeep. Gas burners need their ports kept clear and the igniters clean so they light reliably; electric radiant and induction surfaces need spills wiped before they bake on and cookware kept flat to maintain good contact. Across all three, a working oven seal and clean convection fan keep baking even and stop the appliance from straining to hold temperature.
If a burner won’t ignite, an element stays cold, or an oven drifts off temperature, jot down the model and serial number from the rating plate behind the bottom drawer or along the door frame. Our technicians source igniters, elements, induction coils, and control boards through trusted parts suppliers, back labor with a 30-day warranty, and diagnose before quoting, with range service starting at from $129 depending on the diagnosis.