Verdict
Head-to-head · Best Compact Induction Cooktops

Duxtop 9600LS Portable Induction Cooktop vs Nuwave PIC Gold Induction Cooktop

Which is the better buy? Side-by-side on rating, price, strengths, and watch-outs — with the published ratings we averaged to get there.

The short answer

Duxtop 9600LS Portable Induction Cooktop comes out ahead by a clear margin (4.5 vs 4.0). The gap is mostly about Renters, dorm and RV cooks, and home cooks who want a precise, affordable second burner for simmering sauces, holding stocks, and fast boils. It suits anyone prioritizing fine low-power control and a long timer over a quiet fan or lab-grade temperature accuracy. — read the strengths below before deciding.

Duxtop 9600LS Portable Induction Cooktop
Higher ratedRanked #1 in Best Compact Induction Cooktops
Duxtop 9600LS Portable Induction Cooktop
$116.99

The Duxtop 9600LS is a single-burner 1800W portable induction cooktop that reviewers repeatedly name a top pick under roughly $250, largely on the strength of its 20 power and 20 temperature steps and a 10-hour timer that few budget units match. In testing it boils water quickly (CenturyLife saw about 3.5 minutes) and holds low simmers better than cheaper Duxtop models. It is not a precision instrument: the fan is loud (around 56 dB), it can whine at full power, the temperature sensor reads roughly 15F low, and it pulses at the lowest settings. For an inexpensive countertop induction burner those are expected trade-offs rather than dealbreakers.

Strengths
  • 20 power levels and 20 temperature steps (100-1800W / 100-460F) give finer low-end control than rivals near $100, so simmers and butter-melting hold without scorching
  • 10-hour countdown timer (settable in 1-minute increments) lets it double as a slow-cooker for stocks and soups, far beyond the 170-minute cap on the older 9100MC
  • Glass surface stays cool except where the pan sits, plus a child safety lock and hold-to-activate power button reduce burn risk
Watch-outs
  • Loud cooling fan during operation; CenturyLife measured 56.3 dB at 12 inches and reviewers consistently call it noisy
  • High-pitched squeal/whine at maximum power that one reviewer likened to 'two pieces of metal rubbing against each other'
  • Heat pulses on and off at the lowest power levels, an inherent limit of budget induction that can affect precision cooking
Nuwave PIC Gold Induction Cooktop
Ranked #5 in Best Compact Induction Cooktops
Nuwave PIC Gold Induction Cooktop
$139.99

The Nuwave PIC Gold is one of the cheapest ways into precise portable induction cooking, pairing a 1500W element with 52 temperature steps from 100°F to 575°F and three selectable wattage levels in a roughly 5-pound, sub-14-inch footprint. For the money it heats fast, runs comparatively quiet, and brings real safety features like auto pan-detection. The trade-offs are equally consistent across reviews: a relatively small 8-inch coil that hot-spots under bigger pans, occasionally wobbly heat-hold, and a ferrous-cookware-only limitation. It appears to suit budget-minded and space-constrained buyers more than anyone chasing professional-grade evenness, where pricier 1800W models like Nuwave's own Pro Chef pull ahead. Treat it as a capable value pick within the compact-induction category rather than a top performer.

Strengths
  • Inexpensive entry point into induction cooking, with a manufacturer MSRP around $139.99 and frequent street prices below $100, far cheaper than most precision portable burners.
  • Genuinely fine temperature control: 52 temperature settings from 100°F to 575°F in 10°F increments, with six pre-programmed presets for common tasks.
  • Selectable wattage (600W, 900W, or the default 1500W) lets you dial down power for gentle simmering rather than just cycling a single element on and off.
Watch-outs
  • Works only with ferrous (magnetic) cookware; glass, ceramic, aluminum, and copper pans will not heat at all, so you may need to buy new pots.
  • Reviewers and owners repeatedly cite hot-spotting and unsteady heat hold ("not one of them holds a constant heat"), with uneven results on foods like bacon.
  • The single 8-inch coil concentrates heat at the center of the 12-inch surface, so larger pans cook unevenly toward the edges.

How they stack up

Duxtop 9600LS Portable Induction Cooktop

Among the portable picks, the Duxtop 9600LS gives finer low-end control than the budget NuWave PIC Gold, while the Cuisinart ICT-60 adds a second burner if you routinely cook two pans at once. Buyers who want a permanent fixture rather than a countertop unit should step up to the built-in True Induction TI-2B or the four-zone Empava EMPV-IDC24.

Nuwave PIC Gold Induction Cooktop

The NuWave PIC Gold is the cheapest way into induction here, but the Duxtop 9600LS holds low simmers more steadily and the Cuisinart ICT-60 adds a second burner for not much more. It is, however, the lightest and most travel-friendly unit in this guide.

Specs side-by-side

SpecDuxtop 9600LS Portable Induction CooktopNuwave PIC Gold Induction Cooktop
TypePortable countertopPortable countertop
Burners / Zones11
Total Power1800W1500W (600/900/1500)
Power Levels20 (100–1800W)52 temp / 3 wattage
Temperature Range100–460°F (20 steps)100–575°F (10°F steps)
SurfaceGlass-ceramic (11 × 11 in)Ceramic glass (12 in; 8 in coil)
ControlsLCD sensor-touch, child lockTouch + 6 presets
TimerUp to 10 hrs (1-min steps)Delay + 1-hr resume
Voltage120V120V
Dimensions14 × 11.4 × 2.5 in13.8 × 12.4 × 2.5 in
Weight7.3 lb5.15 lb
Warranty1-year limited1-year limited
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