Professional Appliance Repair Service

Same-Day Oven/Stove Repair in Angleton & Surrounding Cities

Certified technicians, all major brands, professional service

Same-Day Service
20+ Years Experience
Fully Insured
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(888) 771-3235
4.8(3,400+ reviews)

Real Repairs by Our Technicians

Common Oven/Stove Problems

What Our Customers Say

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Jennifer Rodriguez
2 weeks ago

Our Samsung fridge stopped cooling overnight. Called Max Appliance and they sent someone out same day. The technician was professional, explained everything clearly, and had us back up and running in under 2 hours. Pricing was fair and transparent. Highly recommend!

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Michael Thompson
1 month ago

Washer was making a horrible noise. The tech arrived on time, diagnosed the issue quickly (worn bearing), and completed the repair efficiently. Very knowledgeable and reasonably priced. Will definitely use them again.

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Sarah Martinez
1 month ago

Had an issue with our GE dishwasher not draining. Max Appliance came out the next day, fixed it within an hour, and cleaned up everything. The technician was courteous and explained what caused the problem. Great service!

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David Chen
2 months ago

Our LG dryer stopped heating. Called Max Appliance and they were able to fit us in the same day. The repair was done professionally and the price was exactly what they quoted over the phone. Very satisfied with the service.

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Amanda Williams
2 months ago

Excellent service! Our Whirlpool refrigerator was leaking water. The technician arrived within the scheduled window, quickly identified the problem, and had the parts needed in his truck. Fixed it on the spot. Very pleased!

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Robert Johnson
3 months ago

Called them for our Maytag washer that wouldn't spin. They came out same day, tech was friendly and professional. Fixed the issue and gave us maintenance tips to prevent future problems. Fair pricing too. Would recommend!

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Lisa Anderson
4 months ago

Our KitchenAid oven stopped working right before Thanksgiving. Max Appliance saved the day! Same-day service, professional technician, and reasonable rates. We were so relieved. Thank you!

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James Parker
6 months ago

Had them fix our dishwasher last year and they did such a great job we called them again for our fridge. Always reliable, professional, and fair pricing. They're our go-to for all appliance repairs now.

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Patricia White
7 months ago

Very responsive and professional. Our freezer stopped working and they came out within hours. The technician was knowledgeable and explained everything clearly. Repair was done quickly and hasn't had any issues since.

County seat of Brazoria County, Angleton runs kitchens hard. The residential neighborhoods off Henderson Street and West Mulberry Avenue have homes built in the 1960s and 70s — a lot of those kitchens are still running Whirlpool electric ranges that have never been serviced. Gulf Coast humidity does real damage to heating elements and door gaskets over time; corrosion sets in faster down here than it would in Lubbock or Amarillo. Last fall, a call came in from a family near the Brazoria County Fairgrounds area on Highway 35: their GE electric range wouldn't get above 250°F. The bake element had partially burned through, and the oven temperature sensor had drifted nearly 45 degrees off spec — two separate failures presenting as one symptom. That combination is extremely common in older Angleton homes, especially once an oven hits the 12–15 year mark. The heat and humidity down here compress failure timelines significantly compared to drier inland cities.

Zip code 77515 covers the bulk of Angleton — downtown, the older subdivisions off Brazoria Avenue, and newer builds out toward FM 523 and West Mulberry. The homes here from the 1950s through 1970s were wired for appliances that drew far less power than today's ranges. That mismatch leads to connection issues at the terminal block and chronic control board stress on any modern unit you plug into old infrastructure. Out toward Lake Jackson (zip 77566), about 12 miles south on Highway 332, the housing stock skews newer — more KitchenAid slide-in ranges and Samsung electric ranges from the last decade. But even those newer units run harder than they would in a drier climate. Brazoria County thunderstorms routinely cause voltage spikes that damage sensitive control boards mid-cycle. The county's Gulf Coast location also means salt-air corrosion reaches far enough inland to accelerate metal fatigue on broil elements and door hinge assemblies in homes within 30 miles of the coast — which includes most of Angleton.

Common Oven/Stove Issues in Angleton

Uneven Baking in Angleton's Older Electric Ranges

An oven that burns food on one side and undercooks the other is almost always a bake element problem — but not always a complete failure. Partial burnouts on the lower heating element are common in Whirlpool and GE ranges that are 10-plus years old: the element glows across most of its length but has a dead spot where the coil is oxidized or cracked. That dead zone creates a cold pocket in the oven cavity. Replacing the bake element runs $80–$140 in parts for most standard units. On Samsung electric ranges, uneven heat can also trace to a failed oven temperature sensor probe — that's a $25–$45 part that effectively recalibrates how the whole heating cycle runs. Most repairs land at $150–$250 total depending on the unit and parts availability. Call (832) 366-1414 to get a technician out same-day if you've got a meal plan that can't wait.

Oven Won't Reach Temperature — RTD Sensor Probe Failure

The most common complaint from Angleton homeowners: the oven preheats but tops out 50–75 degrees below the set temp. Your display shows 350°F, but the food tells a different story. The culprit is usually a failed oven temperature sensor — sometimes called an RTD probe — a thin metal rod mounted inside the oven cavity that reads actual air temperature and sends that data to the control board. On GE Profile and KitchenAid ranges, these sensors run $30–$60 in parts and are straightforward to replace. If the sensor checks out fine on a resistance test, the next suspect is the oven control board itself, which regulates the entire heating cycle. Control boards on mid-range units run $120–$250 in parts. Combined labor and parts for a sensor swap typically lands at $180–$250; board replacements push $300–$450 depending on the model.

Broiler Won't Ignite or Heats Weakly

A broiler that won't come on — or barely gets hot enough to sear anything — usually has one of two causes: a burned-out broil element on electric ovens, or a failed gas valve igniter on gas ranges. On electric units like LG and Whirlpool ranges common across Angleton, the broil element is a separate coil mounted at the top of the oven cavity. These burn out from repeated high-heat cycles and are very replaceable — typically $50–$90 in parts, $150–$220 for the full repair. On gas ranges, the broiler igniter is the more likely failure point. An igniter that glows orange but won't open the gas valve has lost conductivity and needs replacement; standard igniter work on GE or Frigidaire gas ranges runs $40–$70 in parts. Gulf Coast humidity accelerates oxidation on igniter tips specifically, so this failure arrives earlier in Brazoria County than in drier Texas markets like Midland or Abilene.

Self-Clean Cycle Locks the Door and Won't Release

The self-clean lock failure is one of the more stressful oven problems — you run the cycle, the door latches, and then it simply won't unlock after the oven cools down. The door latch assembly uses a motorized or bi-metallic latch mechanism that can stick or fail mid-cycle. On Whirlpool and KitchenAid ovens, the latch motor wears out after repeated high-temperature cycles; the part itself runs $35–$75. The control board can also misread the oven cavity temperature and keep the latch engaged even when it's safe to open — same symptom, different cause, different fix. Diagnosis matters here. Replacing the latch when it's actually a board communication error wastes money. A proper diagnostic visit ($85–$100) pins down the exact failure before any parts get ordered. Parts and labor for latch assembly replacement typically run $180–$260. Same-day service is available in Angleton — call (832) 366-1414.

Bake Element Burnout — Repair or Replace the Whole Oven?

A fully burned-out bake element is obvious: you'll see scorching, a visible crack in the coil, or occasionally a small arc flash when the oven tries to heat. On units under 12 years old, replacement makes clear financial sense — a new bake element for a Whirlpool, GE, or Samsung range costs $60–$130 in parts, and the swap is straightforward. On units 15 years or older, the math shifts. If the element is burned out AND the door gasket is leaking AND the control board is already throwing error codes, you're looking at $400–$600 in cumulative repairs on a range worth $300–$500 on the used market. That's when replacement becomes the smarter call. On-site we'll give you an honest assessment — if repair doesn't make financial sense, we'll say so directly rather than charging for work that doesn't solve the bigger problem.

Frequently Asked Questions

How fast can you get to Angleton for oven repair?

Technicians run out of the Houston metro, and Angleton is about 45 miles south on Highway 288 — typically a 50–60 minute drive depending on traffic. Same-day appointments are available most days, and we can usually have someone on-site within 2–4 hours of your call. Evening slots run Tuesday through Saturday for homeowners who can't take time off mid-week. Call (832) 366-1414 in the morning and there's a reasonable chance we can get out that same afternoon. We cover all of Brazoria County — Lake Jackson, Clute, Freeport — on the same dispatch schedule as Angleton proper.

What does oven repair in Angleton typically cost?

Diagnostic visits run $85–$100, and that fee gets applied toward the repair if you move forward with the work. Simple fixes — a bake element swap, a temperature sensor replacement — typically land at $150–$250 total parts and labor. Mid-range repairs like a control board or door latch assembly run $280–$420. Gas igniter replacements usually fall in the $160–$240 range. Parts availability is what moves the price most: common Whirlpool and GE components are in stock and inexpensive; certain Samsung or LG board assemblies may require a 1–2 day order. We quote the parts cost before starting any work, so there are no invoice surprises after the fact.

Do you repair both gas and electric ovens in Angleton?

Gas and electric both, including dual-fuel ranges and wall ovens. Gas oven repairs most commonly involve igniter failure, gas valve problems, or thermostat drift. Electric oven repairs usually center on heating elements, RTD sensor probes, or control boards. Double wall ovens are also within our regular scope — not just freestanding ranges. Brands we see consistently across the Angleton and Lake Jackson area include Whirlpool, GE, Samsung, LG, KitchenAid, and Frigidaire. Older Kenmore units — which are almost always Whirlpool or Frigidaire underneath the badge — are fine too; parts availability on those is typically very good.

What error codes should I be worried about on my oven?

On Samsung electric ranges, F-22 or SE codes usually point to a failed touchpad or control board — not a minor issue, but very fixable. LG ranges throw F3 errors for temperature sensor failures and F9 for door latch problems. Whirlpool and KitchenAid use F2-E0 or F3-E1 codes to flag runaway temperature sensor readings. GE ranges signal a bad oven sensor with an F2 or F3 code depending on the generation. None of these codes mean the oven is dead — they mean a specific component needs attention. Screenshot the code when it appears and mention it when you call; it helps the tech show up with the right parts the first time.

How long should an oven last, and when is repair not worth it?

A well-maintained electric range should reach 15–18 years in normal use. Gas ranges often push past 20 years if the burners and igniter get periodic attention. The repair-vs-replace line generally sits around $400 for any single repair on an older unit — if you're spending more than 40–50% of a replacement cost on one fix, it's worth pausing. What also matters is failure frequency: one repair in 10 years is normal, two repairs in 18 months suggests the unit is declining across multiple systems. We give an honest on-site assessment — no pressure either direction. A new mid-range Samsung or Whirlpool range runs $600–$1,000 delivered locally, so context on repair cost matters.

Do you cover Lake Jackson and Clute in addition to Angleton?

Yes — Lake Jackson (77566) and Clute are on the same dispatch route as Angleton. We cover southern Brazoria County regularly, including Freeport and Richwood. Scheduling works the same way across the area: same-day appointments available most days, 2–4 hour response window. If you're anywhere along the Highway 332 or Highway 288 corridor in Brazoria County and your oven has stopped working right, call (832) 366-1414 or schedule online. We confirm a 2-hour arrival window so you're not stuck waiting around all morning.

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(888) 771-3235
(888) 771-3235
Angleton Oven/Stove Repair & Surrounding Cities | Same-Day Service | Max Appliance Service