Induction rebates in Michigan (2026)
HEAR program status
Federal programs
Federal HEAR — Electric Stove / Cooktop
Launching soonIncome-qualified induction or electric range rebate; availability tracks state HEAR rollout.
Up to $840; 100% of cost ≤80% AMI, 50% of cost 80–150% AMI
Michigan programs
No state-level induction programs currently tracked for Michigan. Check utility-specific rebates and run the calculator for stacking opportunities.
The case that has nothing to do with rebates
Induction cooktops boil water in roughly half the time of a gas burner, hold a low simmer more precisely, and stop putting indoor air pollutants in your kitchen. The cooking case is good enough that a lot of people who couldn't care less about electrification end up converts after one week.
The rebate case adds a $200–$840 layer on top — and in some cases ladders into a bigger electrification project (replacing a gas stove is often the last gas appliance you'd need to retire before you can cut the gas line entirely).
What 2026 rebates look like
- Federal HEAR: up to $840 for income-qualified households — 100% of cost ≤80% AMI, 50% of cost 80–150% AMI. Subject to your state's HEAR program being open.
- State + utility rebates: Less common than for heat pumps, but a few states (NY, MA, RI, OR, WA) and a handful of utilities offer $100–$400 for induction. Most are tied to gas-stove retirement specifically.
The federal HEAR rebate alone often covers half a mid-tier induction range. A $1,400 freestanding 30" induction range minus an $840 rebate = $560 — about what you'd pay for a basic electric coil range.
The hidden costs nobody tells you
- Cookware. Induction only works with magnetic-bottom pans. If your current set is aluminum or copper, plan on $200–$500 in new cookware. A magnet on the bottom is the test — if it sticks, it works.
- The 240V circuit. If you currently have a gas stove, the kitchen probably doesn't have a 240V/50A circuit. Adding one costs $400–$1,500 depending on panel proximity. Sometimes the existing gas line and 120V outlet can be reused for the gas-line cap and the new circuit; sometimes not.
- Pacemakers. A non-issue for most people but worth flagging. Standard guidance is that pacemaker users should stay 24" away from active induction burners. Not a blocker — just something to ask about.
Built-in cooktop vs freestanding range
Two paths and the rebate logic is identical for both. The decision is mostly about your existing kitchen:
- Freestanding 30" range (combined cooktop + oven): Drops into the standard slot a gas range came out of. Total cost $1,200–$3,500 installed. Easiest swap.
- Built-in cooktop + separate wall oven: More flexible, often higher-end. $2,500–$6,000+ total. Worth it during a kitchen remodel, harder to justify as a one-off swap.
Frequently asked
Is induction really faster than gas? +
Yes — induction transfers about 85% of the energy directly to the pan vs ~40% for gas. Boiling 1 quart of water takes roughly 90 seconds on induction vs 3 minutes on a typical gas burner. The difference is most visible at high heat; at low simmer, induction is just more precise.
Do I need new cookware? +
Only if your current cookware isn't magnetic on the bottom. Cast iron, stainless steel, and most carbon steel work. Aluminum, copper, and ceramic don't. A refrigerator magnet test on the bottom of a pan tells you in 2 seconds.
Can I install a portable induction cooktop and skip the 240V wiring? +
You can, and it's a great way to test induction without commitment. Single-burner portable units are $80–$200 and run off a standard 120V outlet. They don't qualify for HEAR rebates, but they're a low-cost proof of concept.
Will an induction stove work during a power outage? +
No. Gas stoves with electronic ignition technically don't either — you can manually light the burner with a match, but the electronics need power for surface controls. If reliable cooking during outages is critical, a propane camping burner or a small generator is more practical than choosing your primary stove around outage scenarios.
How does HEAR pay for an induction stove specifically? +
Same structure as other HEAR-eligible appliances. Through a state-registered contractor or appliance retailer (not all participate yet), the rebate is applied at point of sale. Up to $840 for the stove itself; income-tiered. The retailer or installer handles the paperwork; you see the discount on your receipt.