AbsoluteGM · Seattle, WA · Invisacook Models & Specs
Invisacook Induction Cooktops
The hidden-induction brand that started the category in North America. XL 2-burner and Pro 4-burner models, full compatibility list, and what to know before you order one for a Seattle kitchen build.
Invisacook is a US-based manufacturer that pioneered the hidden induction category in the North American market. Their cooktops mount underneath a 12 mm porcelain or sintered-stone slab and turn the countertop itself into the cooking surface. Two product lines are available: the 2-burner XL at roughly $2,500 and the 4-burner Pro 4 at roughly $4,500, both shipped through an authorized installer network rather than retail.
What separates Invisacook from competitors like Etna and Sapienstone is the combination of US manufacturing, a published compatibility list across major slab brands (Dekton, Neolith, Lapitec, Sapienstone, Bedrosians), and a dealer network that handles fabrication and electrical alongside the unit itself. The product is sold as a system, not just an appliance.
Two Models, One Technology
The Invisacook XL is the 2-burner model — 3.6 kW total output, two cooking zones spaced for typical home cookware, dimensions roughly 22 in × 12 in. It fits cleanly into kitchen islands and ADU kitchens where two simultaneous burners are enough. Unit price is approximately $2,500 through the dealer network.
The Invisacook Pro 4 is the 4-burner model — 7.2 kW peak output across four zones, dimensions roughly 30 in × 21 in. It supports simultaneous high-output cooking on multiple burners, making it the right choice for serious home cooks and large-island kitchens. Unit price is approximately $4,500 through the dealer network.
Burner Layout
Four Reasons Invisacook Leads the Hidden Induction Category
Invisacook publishes a tested-compatible list of slab brands and product lines — Dekton, Neolith, Lapitec, Sapienstone, Bedrosians and others. That list takes guesswork out of slab selection.
Invisacook units are manufactured in the US with North American electrical certification (UL listed, 240V residential standard). Replacement parts and warranty service ship from US warehouses.
Units are sold through authorized dealers who coordinate the slab, the precision cutout, and the electrical install alongside the unit itself. Buying direct is not an option.
Invisacook has been shipping units in North America since 2018 — the longest field history of any hidden cooktop brand on the continent.
Five Decisions Before You Order the Unit
The 2-burner XL handles most home cooking. The 4-burner Pro 4 is required for cooking on multiple burners simultaneously. The price difference is roughly $2,000 between models.
The slab must be 12 mm porcelain or sintered stone from an Invisacook-approved brand: Dekton, Neolith, Lapitec, Sapienstone, or Bedrosians. Other brands void the warranty.
The Invisacook unit weighs 30–45 lbs, generates heat that must dissipate downward, and needs solid framing immediately under the slab. Open-bottom cabinets do not work.
The XL needs a 30A 240V circuit; the Pro 4 needs 40–50A 240V. The circuit must terminate inside the cabinet base — not at a wall outlet.
AbsoluteGM is part of the Pacific Northwest dealer network — the unit, slab fabrication, electrical coordination, and install all flow through one project quote. Plan a 3–6 week lead time.
Slabs Tested & Approved by Invisacook
Invisacook publishes a compatibility list of 12 mm porcelain and sintered-stone slab brands tested to work under their cooktops. Picking from this list keeps the warranty intact.
Invisacook vs Other Hidden Cooktop Brands
Pick Invisacook when the project is in North America, when the slab choice is one of the published-compatible brands, and when long-term parts and service support matter. The combination of US manufacturing, an established dealer network, and the longest field track record of any hidden cooktop brand on the continent makes it the conservative pick for a 10+ year kitchen build.
Consider Etna (Italian) when the design specifies a European slab brand outside the Invisacook compatibility list. Consider Sapienstone Cooktop when the specified slab is Sapienstone — they make a unit specifically tuned to their own slab line. For most Seattle hidden induction projects, Invisacook remains the default.
Compare Invisacook to other hidden induction systems and see what a full Invisacook install looks like end to end.
Order an Invisacook for your kitchen
Send your kitchen layout and slab choice. As a Pacific Northwest authorized dealer, we will quote the Invisacook unit, the compatible slab fabrication, and the full install — one project, one accountable vendor.
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