You turn the oven on, wait for it to preheat, but it never gets hot — or barely warms up. An oven that won't heat properly throws off your entire cooking routine, and it's more common than you'd think. Whether you have a gas or electric oven, the causes are usually straightforward to diagnose, and most repairs are same-day fixes.
Common Causes
Burned-Out Bake or Broil Element (Electric)
Electric ovens use a bake element on the bottom and a broil element on top. These are the thick metal loops that glow red when heating. Over time, they can crack, blister, or burn through completely. You might see a visible break in the element or notice it doesn't glow at all. This is the most common electric oven failure.
Faulty Igniter (Gas)
Gas ovens use a hot surface igniter (a small glowing element) to reach a high enough temperature to open the gas safety valve and light the burner. When the igniter weakens with age, it glows but can't get hot enough to open the valve — so gas never flows and the oven never heats. You might see the igniter glow orange for several minutes without the burner lighting.
Failed Oven Temperature Sensor (Thermistor)
The temperature sensor is a thin metal probe, usually mounted at the back wall inside the oven cavity. It tells the control board the current temperature so it knows when to cycle heating on and off. If the sensor gives a false reading — saying the oven is already hot when it's cold — the control board won't activate the heating element or igniter.
Blown Thermal Fuse
The thermal fuse is a safety device that cuts power to the oven if it detects dangerously high temperatures. Once blown, it doesn't reset — the oven simply won't heat at all until the fuse is replaced. Power surges during Houston's summer storms can sometimes trip the thermal fuse even without an actual overheat condition.
Control Board Malfunction
The electronic control board (or clock/timer on older models) sends voltage to the heating elements or igniter based on your temperature setting. If the relay on the board fails or the board is damaged by a power surge, it can't send the signal to heat. The display and controls may work perfectly fine even though the board can't activate heating.
What You Can Try Yourself
- 1
For electric ovens: turn on the bake setting and visually check whether the bottom element glows red — if it doesn't glow at all or has visible cracks or blistering, it needs replacement
- 2
For gas ovens: turn on the oven and watch the igniter through the bottom vent — if it glows for more than 90 seconds without the burner lighting, the igniter is too weak
- 3
Check your circuit breaker panel — electric ovens run on a dedicated 240V double breaker, and if only one leg trips, the oven may power on but not heat
- 4
Make sure the oven isn't in demo mode or Sabbath mode — check your owner's manual for how to exit these settings, as they disable heating
- 5
Pull the oven away from the wall and verify the power cord is fully plugged in — the heavy 240V plug can work itself loose over time
When to Call a Professional
- ⚠You smell gas when the oven is on but it never lights — turn off the oven immediately and call for service, as unburnt gas is a safety hazard
- ⚠The oven heats to the wrong temperature — overcooking or undercooking food consistently means the sensor or control board calibration is off
- ⚠The broil works but bake doesn't (or vice versa) — this confirms a specific element failure rather than a wiring issue
- ⚠The oven trips the circuit breaker when you turn it on — there's likely a short circuit in the element or wiring that needs immediate attention
Not sure what's causing the problem?
Get your oven back in action — Max Appliance Service provides same-day oven diagnostics across Houston for $89, and our technicians work on all major gas and electric brands.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is it dangerous to use an oven that's not heating properly?▼
Electric ovens that aren't heating are generally safe — they just won't cook. Gas ovens are a different story. If you smell gas or the igniter keeps glowing without lighting the burner, turn the oven off and ventilate the kitchen. Unburnt gas buildup is a real safety concern.
Can I replace an oven bake element myself?▼
It's one of the simpler appliance repairs. The element is usually held in with two screws at the back wall, and the wire connectors pull straight off. Make sure you unplug the oven or turn off the breaker first. That said, if you're not comfortable working with 240V wiring, a technician can do it quickly.
Why does my gas oven take so long to preheat?▼
A weak igniter is the usual culprit. As igniters age, they take longer to reach the temperature needed to open the gas valve. If preheating takes more than 15 minutes to reach 350°F, the igniter is on its way out and will eventually fail completely.
My oven display works but it won't heat — what does that mean?▼
The display and controls run on low-voltage circuits, while the heating elements use high-voltage power. This means the control board relay, the thermal fuse, or the element itself has failed — the 'brain' works but can't deliver power to the 'muscle.' A diagnostic will identify which component is the weak link.

