The present work aims to assess the Recrystallization mechanism and Kinetics parameters in Cold-Rolled Dual-Phase stainless steel. For this purpose, Differential Scanning Calorimetry was used over a range of 5–20 K/mn of heating rate, to identify the classical kinetic parameters such as recrystallization temperature, activation energy, and growth mechanism following 90 % reduction in thickness. The findings revealed that the recrystallization temperature increased with rising heating rates within the range [706.8–732] for the ferrite phase, as well as [1282.0–1360.3] K for the austenite phase. The estimated activation energies for ferrite and austenite recrystallization fell within the range of [207.2 ± 1.4–220.1 ± 2.5] kJ/mol and [220.2 ± 2.0–241.1 ± 4.0] kJ/mol, respectively. The Avrami parameter approached half-unity for both ferrite and austenite recrystallized phases for which results can be interpreted to be chiefly responsible for a general mechanism involving the growth of new grains with appreciable initial volume through a diffusion-controlled process.