Available for Same-Day Service

Oven & Stove Repair in Burke, VA

Heating elements, gas burners, and control boards. Trusted oven, stove, and range repair for Burke homeowners.

Fast Response

Same or next day

Warranty Included

90 days on parts & labor

Local Expert

Serving DMV since 2010

Trusted Oven & Stove Repair in Burke, VA

When your oven won’t heat or your cooktop burner won’t light, dinner is on hold. We repair electric and gas ovens, stoves, ranges, cooktops, and wall ovens — safely handling gas connections and high-voltage elements that should never be a DIY project.

Burke is largely defined by Burke Centre, a 1970s-80s planned community of clustered townhomes and single-family homes built around shared pedestrian paths and pools, alongside the older, more spread-out neighborhoods near Burke Lake Park and South Run. Appliances in the Burke Centre clusters tend to be similar in age within a cluster, since whole sections were built and renovated in waves — so if a neighbor's dishwasher just failed, yours may not be far behind. Around Burke Lake and Kings Park West, it's a wider mix of home ages and appliance generations.

We've served Burke since 2010. When you call, we route the nearest technician to your cluster or neighborhood — from Burke Centre out to South Run and Kings Park West — usually same or next day, with common parts on the truck.

Oven & Stove Repair across every Burke neighborhood

Burke Centre · South Run · Kings Park West border · Burke Lake area · Old Keene Mill · Cherry Run · Signal Hill

Covering ZIP codes 22015 and 22009. Same-day and next-day slots available across all of them.

Common problems we fix

  • Oven won’t heat or won’t reach temperature
  • Gas burner won’t light or clicks constantly
  • Uneven baking or temperature is off
  • Control panel unresponsive or showing error codes
  • Smell of gas (turn off and call immediately)

Our oven & stove repair services

  • Bake and broil element replacement
  • Igniter and gas valve service
  • Oven temperature sensor calibration
  • Control board and touchpad repair
  • Cooktop, range, and wall-oven repair

A note for Burke homeowners: Because Burke Centre's clusters were built in waves, we often see multiple homes on the same street reaching appliance end-of-life around the same time — if a neighbor recently had a compressor or heating element go, it's worth a proactive check on yours rather than waiting for it to fail during a holiday weekend.

All major brands, factory-certified

We are factory-certified for Wolf, Viking, and Thermador ranges, and service all standard brands including GE, Whirlpool, Samsung, LG, Frigidaire, KitchenAid, and Bosch.

Oven & Stove Repair in Burke: a complete guide

Ovens, stoves, and ranges combine two largely independent systems: the cooktop (electric coil or radiant elements, or gas burners with igniters) and the oven cavity (a bake element and broil element on electric ovens, or a single gas burner with a temperature-modulating valve on gas ovens), tied together by a control board and, on most modern units, a temperature sensor that constantly reports cavity temperature back to the board so it can cycle the heat source and hold a steady bake temperature.

An electric oven that won't heat almost always has a visibly failed bake or broil element — a healthy element glows uniformly orange when heating; one that's cracked, blistered, or sparking at a break point needs replacing. When the element looks fine but the oven still won't reach temperature, the more likely culprit is the temperature sensor drifting out of calibration or a control board no longer sending power to the element, both of which require testing rather than visual inspection.

Gas burners that click repeatedly without lighting point to a dirty or misaligned igniter, moisture or food debris in the burner cap ports, or — less often — a gas valve that isn't opening. A clicking-but-no-light burner is usually a simple, inexpensive fix once we've identified which of those three it is; a burner that lights but burns unevenly or with a mostly-yellow flame (rather than blue) usually just needs the burner cap and ports cleaned, since that's typically a sign of a partial obstruction rather than a valve problem.

Uneven baking, or an oven that reads 350°F but bakes like 300°F or 400°F, is one of the most common and most under-diagnosed oven complaints — it's almost never the element, and almost always a temperature sensor that's drifted out of spec or is touching the cavity wall (which throws off its reading). We test actual cavity temperature against the display with an independent probe before replacing anything, since guessing here leads to a needless element swap that doesn't fix the problem.

Any gas smell around a range or oven is the one symptom that means stop and call immediately rather than schedule normally — it can indicate a loose fitting, a cracked burner valve, or an aging flex connector, all of which we test with a proper leak-detection method before returning the unit to service. Electronic error codes are usually safe to research but not to keep using through, since continuing to run a unit with a board or sensor fault can sometimes cascade into a second failure (an oven that overheats past its sensor's failed reading, for instance).

Repair is almost always the right call on ovens and ranges: elements, igniters, sensors, and control boards are inexpensive relative to a new range, and that math is even stronger for gas ranges, professional-style ranges, and luxury brands (Wolf, Viking, Thermador) where replacement costs several times a standard range. To keep an oven accurate and reliable: run the self-clean cycle sparingly (the high heat is hard on elements and sensors over years of use), keep burner caps and ports clean of spill residue, and don't line the oven floor with foil, which blocks airflow the temperature sensor and convection fan rely on and can also reflect enough heat to damage the element.

It's also worth calibrating your expectations around oven thermometers: every oven drifts slightly out of factory calibration over years of use, and a $10 oven thermometer left inside during preheat is the simplest way to check whether your unit's actual temperature matches the dial before assuming a recipe or a cooking technique is to blame for inconsistent results. If the gap is more than about 25 degrees, that's a legitimate calibration or sensor issue worth having looked at rather than something to work around indefinitely.

What Our Neighbors Say

★★★★★

"Arnie's saved my Thanksgiving! My oven died two days before, and they came out same-day. Professional and fair pricing."

Sarah Jenkins

Arlington, VA

★★★★★

"The AI diagnostic tool on the website was actually spot on. It predicted a drain pump issue, and the tech arrived with the part."

Mike Ross

Fairfax, VA

★★★★★

"Honest service. Another company told me I needed a new fridge, but Arnie's fixed it for a fraction of the cost."

Elena Rodriguez

Washington DC

Frequently asked questions

Why is my electric oven not heating? +

Usually a failed bake element (often visibly broken or blistered) or a faulty temperature sensor. Both are common, quick repairs.

My gas burner clicks but won’t light — why? +

This is typically a dirty or misaligned igniter, or moisture in the burner cap. We clean, realign, or replace the igniter as needed.

Is it safe to use my oven with an error code? +

If you smell gas, turn it off and call us right away. For electronic error codes, it’s best to stop using it until diagnosed to avoid further damage.

Need oven & stove repair in Burke, VA?

Same-day appointments available. Honest pricing, 90-day warranty.

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Northern Virginia703-479-1822
Maryland301-720-0001
Washington DC202-569-0852

Business Hours

Mon-Sat: 8am - 7pm

Emergency service available on Sundays

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