Induction Hob Clicking or Buzzing

Clicks, buzzes, or light humming sounds from an induction hob often feel alarming — especially if you’re used to silent cooking.

People assume:

  • something is loose
  • power is unstable
  • the hob is malfunctioning

In most cases, these sounds are normal by-products of how induction cooking works.

Why induction hobs make noise at all

Induction hobs don’t heat pans directly.

They:

  • generate a rapidly changing magnetic field
  • induce electrical currents in the pan
  • heat the pan itself, not the hob surface

That process can create sound — even when everything is working perfectly.

The most common normal sounds

Clicking sounds

Clicks often come from:

  • power regulation switching
  • internal relays adjusting output
  • the hob cycling energy to maintain temperature

These clicks usually:

  • happen intermittently
  • change with heat level
  • stop when power demand changes

Buzzing or humming

Buzzing is commonly caused by:

  • vibration in the pan
  • interaction between the magnetic field and the cookware base
  • high power levels

Thinner or cheaper pans tend to buzz more.

Light whining at high heat

At higher settings, the magnetic field is stronger.

That can cause:

  • faint whining
  • higher-pitched hums
  • vibration noises

This is especially noticeable on boost settings.

Why some pans make more noise than others

Cookware matters.

Noise is more likely with:

  • thin-based pans
  • uneven bases
  • stacked or nested pans
  • certain alloys

Heavier, flatter pans tend to be quieter.

The hob isn’t faulty — it’s reacting to the cookware.

Why sounds change while cooking

Induction hobs constantly:

  • adjust power output
  • respond to pan temperature
  • cycle energy rapidly

As cooking conditions change, so do the sounds.

Inconsistency feels wrong, but it’s active regulation.

When clicking or buzzing is usually normal

Sounds are usually normal if:

  • cooking performance is consistent
  • sounds change with heat level
  • there’s no burning smell
  • the hob responds normally to controls

Noise alone does not indicate a fault.

When induction noise may indicate a problem

Noise may indicate an issue if:

  • buzzing is extremely loud
  • sounds are harsh or grinding
  • the hob cuts power unexpectedly
  • error codes appear
  • cooking performance is erratic

Those signs suggest electrical or control issues, not normal induction behaviour.

The useful question to ask

Ask:

Is the sound linked to power changes — or completely uncontrolled?

Controlled, responsive sound = normal

Uncontrolled noise = potential problem

The calm conclusion

Induction hobs make noise because:

  • electricity is being switched rapidly
  • energy is being controlled precisely
  • cookware is part of the system

Clicks and buzzes are often the sound of efficient heat control, not failure.